Instructional Video0:47
Curated Video

I WONDER - What Is Climate Change?

Pre-K - 5th
This video is answering the question of what is climate change.
Instructional Video3:45
Espresso Media

Chernobyl: A Ticking Time Bomb

9th - 12th
Chernobyl part 1/7: This video discusses the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, where a sequence of errors led to a catastrophic nuclear accident that killed hundreds and created permanent ghost towns in eastern Ukraine. The protective...
Instructional Video6:26
Espresso Media

Ariane 5: The Importance of Lateral Boosters in Rocket Propulsion

9th - 12th
Ariane 5 part 4/8: The video explains the importance of the lateral boosters in the Ariane 5 rocket and how they provide the necessary power to overcome Earth's gravity and navigate through the atmosphere. The video also highlights the...
Instructional Video6:51
NASA

NASA | The Road to Glory

3rd - 11th
Glory is a unique research satellite designed to orbit the Earth and achieve two major goals. Glory's first goal is to collect data on the properties of aerosols and black carbon in the Earth's atmosphere and climate system; its second...
Instructional Video4:01
NASA

NASA | Meanwhile at the Bottom of the Ocean

3rd - 11th
The Ben Franklin mission has been forgotten by time, overshadowed by the concurrent Apollo 11 mission. However, the scientific findings obtained by the six aquanauts has provided a foundation for understanding the Gulf Stream and ocean...
Instructional Video1:08
Next Animation Studio

Forty SpaceX satellites burn up after solar flare hits Earth

12th - Higher Ed
A solar flare hit Earth’s atmosphere, creating a geomagnetic storm at the worst possible moment.
Instructional Video2:43
Learning Mole

Venus Facts for Kids

Pre-K - 12th
This video explores five fun facts about the planet Venus.
Instructional Video5:00
Curated Video

The Science Behind Rainbows

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This video provides a clear and concise explanation of how rainbows are formed through the reflection, refraction, and dispersion of sunlight by water droplets in the atmosphere. It also explores different types of rainbows, such as...
Instructional Video4:38
FuseSchool

How Can We Reduce Carbon Dioxide Emissions

6th - Higher Ed
If we reduce our use of fossil fuels, we will reduce the amount of extra carbon dioxide that we put into the atmosphere. There are 2 ways to reduce our carbon dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels: 1) We make our processes more...
Instructional Video4:29
PBS

What's actually the worst greenhouse gas?

12th - Higher Ed
Earth's atmosphere naturally contains greenhouse gases. Without them, the world would be way too cold for humans. But we are adding extra greenhouse gases, which are causing Earth to heat up and disrupting weather patterns worldwide. So...
Instructional Video3:10
Science ABC

Where Does Snow Come From?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Technically speaking, the snow falling on mountains and other cold regions is just frozen water. It is formed of tiny crystals of frozen water and looks a bit like small pieces of cotton. A snowflake is an ice crystal, or an amalgamation...
Instructional Video13:58
Dom Burgess

Why Going To Mars Would Be Bad For Your Body

9th - 11th
Humans haven't been to Mars yet, and there's a good reason for that - it's really not good for the your body! In this episode, Dom finds himself stranded in space with only 12 minutes of oxygen left to find out why. Accompanied by the...
Instructional Video1:04
Next Animation Studio

Massive collision with a planet bigger than earth may be the answer to Jupiter's unusual core

12th - Higher Ed
A cosmic collision between Jupiter and a protoplanet billions of years ago could explain the unexpected readings from NASA’s Juno space probe.
Instructional Video5:43
Science360

Atmospheric scientist Ralph Cicerone - ScienceLives

12th - Higher Ed
If you read Ralph Cicerone’s Massachusetts Institute of Technology profile, it says as an undergraduate he was a bit unprepared when he arrived at the school in 1961. Apparently, the public high school in his small Western Pennsylvania...
Instructional Video1:08
Next Animation Studio

Climate change is inflating the troposphere like a balloon

12th - Higher Ed
Pushed by warming air and pulled by a shrinking stratosphere, no one knows where the troposphere goes from here.
Instructional Video9:30
Weird History

Meganeura, The Prehistoric Dragonfly

12th - Higher Ed
Three hundred million years ago, the largest insect ever known to humankind hunted in fern jungles and boasted an enormous wingspan of nearly 2.5 feet. Different from modern dragonflies in its size and other attributes, the Meganeura...