Instructional Video4:37
SciShow

How Scientists Protect the World's Most Famous Art

12th - Higher Ed
Conserving and restoring art can be pretty tricky. Thankfully, scientists have been learning how to restore artwork in some pretty cool ways that are effective, safe, and a little weird, to be honest.
Instructional Video13:30
Crash Course

E1 and E2 Reactions - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve spent the last few episodes talking about substitution reactions, but now it’s time to talk about a related type of reaction: elimination reactions! Elimination reactions are super important because they are the main way we can...
Instructional Video0:53
SciShow

If oxygen means fire, how do we get it on airplanes? #shorts #science #SciShow

12th - Higher Ed
If oxygen means fire, how do we get it on airplanes? #shorts #science #SciShow
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

Dmitri Mendeleev: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to the man behind the periodic table - the brilliant Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev.
Instructional Video5:41
SciShow

Retracing a Mastodon’s Steps With Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to strontium, oxygen, and rings in a tusk, scientists now have evidence that extinct mastodons may have participated in yearly migrations.
Instructional Video10:37
Crash Course

Thermodynamics and Energy Diagrams - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In organic chemistry, different reactions can take place at vastly different speeds. To better understand whether a reaction actually will happen, and how useful that reaction is, we need to understand thermodynamics and kinetics. In...
Instructional Video3:25
SciShow

We Had Catnip All Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
Why do cats love catnip so much? Researchers have found a possible evolutionary answer to this adorable feline phenomenon!
Instructional Video13:16
Crash Course

Determining SN1, SN2, E1, and E2 Reactions: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Organic chemistry isn’t that different from an adventure game, with substrates as characters, nucleophiles as magic potions, and reaction conditions as different magical kingdoms. In this episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry, we’ll...
Instructional Video3:10
SciShow

Bath Salts

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about the scary new drug that's led to some recent incidences of goat stabbing, as well as other tragedies - bath salts. We learn how it works and ask the important question: why?
Instructional Video4:41
SciShow

How Scientists Found the First Type of Molecule in the Universe - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Around a quarter of a million years after the Big Bang, the very first molecule, helium hydride was formed. Now scientists have confirmed that molecule is still being made, and they found it with some help from a high flying airplane.
Instructional Video15:54
TED Talks

TED: A crash course in organic chemistry | Jakob Magolan

12th - Higher Ed
Jakob Magolan is here to change your perception of organic chemistry. In an accessible talk packed with striking graphics, he teaches us the basics while breaking the stereotype that organic chemistry is something to be afraid of.
Instructional Video4:14
Bozeman Science

Synthesis and Decomposition Reactions

12th - Higher Ed
Atoms or molecules combine to form a new compound in a synthesis reaction. Examples include the addition of oxygen to magnesium metal to create magnesium oxide and the addition of carbon dioxide to water to crete carbonic acid. A combine...
Instructional Video4:29
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The truth about electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) - Helen M. Farrell

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1982, a young nurse was suffering from severe, unrelenting depression. She couldn’t work, socialize or concentrate. One controversial treatment changed everything: after two courses of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) her symptoms...
Instructional Video6:35
Be Smart

Title: The Recipe For Life

12th - Higher Ed
If the human body could be distilled down into one molecule, what would our chemical formula be? And WHY is it that way? There’s a whole lot of elements on the periodic table, but life depends on relatively few of them in order to...
Instructional Video15:55
TED Talks

TED: This computer will grow your food in the future | Caleb Harper

12th - Higher Ed
What if we could grow delicious, nutrient-dense food, indoors anywhere in the world? Caleb Harper, director of the Open Agriculture Initiative at the MIT Media Lab, wants to change the food system by connecting growers with technology....
Instructional Video7:24
Bozeman Science

Chemical Analysis

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how chemical analysis is important in determining the composition, purity and empirical formula of a compound. An empirical formula determination problem is also included.
Instructional Video11:50
Crash Course

Substitution Reactions - SN1 and SN2 Mechanisms - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve already learned a bit about substitution reactions in organic chemistry and the two different paths they can follow: SN1 and SN2. In order to better predict the products of a substitution reaction and understand how they work, we...
Instructional Video2:34
SciShow

Why Can't We Make a Good Salt Substitute?

12th - Higher Ed
We have many alternatives to sugar, but where are all the salt substitutes?
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

Oxygen is Killing You

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to oxygen - the element that makes it possible for most animals to live, but which is simultaneously responsible for a lot of bad things going on in our bodies.
Instructional Video7:35
SciShow

Venomous Mammals, Sensory Receptors & the Moon's True Origin Story

12th - Higher Ed
Hank describes to us some news stories that illustrate how science is continually changing the things we think we "know" - from the status of various animals species, to the way our senses work and even where the Moon came from -...
Instructional Video11:57
Crash Course

Enols and Enolates - Reactivity, Halogenation, and Alkylation: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
You may know that cows produce methane, which is a big concern when it comes to global heating, but did you know that organic chemistry provides a potential solution to this problem? Feeding cows small amounts of red seaweed can greatly...
Instructional Video10:03
SciShow

Here's What DNA Really Looks Like

12th - Higher Ed
There’s more to DNA than just the double helix we know and love: under some conditions this familiar molecule can take on unfamiliar forms, each of which can have a different impact on our health.
Instructional Video12:39
Crash Course

Water and Solutions -- for Dirty Laundry: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Dihydrogen monoxide (better know as water) is the key to nearly everything. It falls from the sky, makes up 60% of our bodies, and just about every chemical process related to life takes place with it or in it. Without it, none of the...
Instructional Video13:15
TED Talks

TED: A new way to study the brain's invisible secrets | Ed Boyden

12th - Higher Ed
Neuroengineer ed Boyden wants to know how the tiny biomolecules in our brains generate emotions, thoughts and feelings -- and he wants to find the molecular changes that lead to disorders like epilepsy and Alzheimer's. Rather than...