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Instructional Video6:58
The Slow Mo Guys

Microwaving an Airbag in Slow Motion - The Slow Mo Guys - 4K

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Gav and Dan pay tribute to a classic internet experiment. Roasted nuts, anyone? Don't Try at home. Follow Gav on Twitter - https://twitter.com/GavinFree Follow Dan on Twitter - https://twitter.com/DanielGruchy Is it a good idea to...
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Instructional Video1:34
Science360

Soap in the microwave

12th - Higher Ed
A bar of soap in the microwave grows to tremendous proportions. Parts needed: 1 microwave oven, 1 bar of ivory soap.
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Instructional Video2:00
Curated Video

MICROWAVE CANNON! A High Energy Radio Frequence gun. (700 watts)

K - 5th
Hey guys, in this video I show you how I built my microwave gun, also known as a HERF gun. I take a magnetron out of the oven and connect it to a waveguide. The results were more than I expected! FIRST- Microwaves are not "dangerous"....
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Instructional Video12:12
12tone

How A Pair Of Microwave Engineers Broke Music

6th - 11th
Try 2 months of Skillshare absolutely free! http://skl.sh/12tone18 There's lots of strange and beautiful scales out there, each with their own unique sounds, origins, and constructions, but for my money, there's none stranger or more...
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Instructional Video27:52
NileRed

The microwave plasma mystery

9th - 11th
Sometime last year, I got really interested in microwave plasma, which can be made from a lot of things like lit matches, aluminum foil or just some grapes. However, when I went searching for more info about it, I really couldn't find...
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Instructional Video1:50
Tom Scott

The Diner Where You Microwaved Your Own Food

9th - 11th
http://tomscott.com - http://twitter.com/tomscott - On a busy street in Manhattan, there was once a place called Tad's 30 Varieties of Meals -- or possibly Tad's 57 Varieties, or maybe just Tad's. It closed long ago, but the idea was...
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Instructional Video6:07
Curated Video

The maser goes mainstream: Diamond microwave lasers

9th - 11th
You may have heard of lasers, but what about their older brother - masers. Invented in the 1950s, masers use microwaves instead of light, but they were somewhat eclipsed by the much more practical laser. More than half a century later,...
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Instructional Video0:17
The March of Time

1938: EXPERIMENTAL TECHNOLOGY: Two men working w/ radio controlled traffic light, light changing simultaneously red one side & green on other. Microwave traffic control board, inventor William Halsted holding handheld selector.

12th - Higher Ed
MOT 1938: EXPERIMENTAL TECHNOLOGY: Two men working w/ radio controlled traffic light, light changing simultaneously red one side & green on other. Microwave traffic control board, inventor William Halsted holding handheld selector.
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Instructional Video13:34
Curated Video

Exploring Communication: Microwaves, Satellites, and Digital Signaling

9th - Higher Ed
The video is a lecture presentation on communication, describing how various parts of the electromagnetic spectrum are used in different communication systems. The presentation covers topics including microwaves, satellite communication,...
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Instructional Video3:01
Bozeman Science

Electromagnetic Radiation

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen details the waves in electromagnetic radiation. There is an inverse relation between the wavelength and frequency of electromagnetic waves. Electromagnetic radiation includes gamma rays, x-rays, infrared...
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Instructional Video3:55
SciShow Kids

Watch Soap Grow!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks just did a really cool and easy experiment: they put a special kind of soap in the microwave and made it grow! Now they want to do it again to check their results and figure out how it happened!
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Instructional Video0:48
Next Animation Studio

Astronomers find source of Milky Way's unusual microwave light emissions

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers may have finally figured out the decades-old mystery of certain glowing regions in our galaxy: nanodiamonds.
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Instructional Video3:01
Curated Video

Making Plasma, Microwaving grapes --- SMS#2

K - 5th
Plasma, like solid liquid and gas is considered a state of matter. Plasma is ionized gas, and can be created by applying energy to a gas, like electromagnetic or electrical energy like this transformer. As you can see it puts out an...
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Instructional Video3:20
Science360

Experimentation - Anything can go in the microwave...What?

12th - Higher Ed
Physics teacher Mark Paricio brings his love of research and his passion for trying new things to his students. Paricio is a recipient of the 2013 Presidential Award for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching.
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Instructional Video2:54
Curated Video

NASA | SMAP Radiometer versus Radio Frequency Interference

3rd - 11th
The microwave radiometer on NASA's Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite was designed and built at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Along with the microwave radar, data from the radiometer will be used to calculate the water...
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Instructional Video1:11
Science360

Flashy grape

12th - Higher Ed
A grape makes a great dipole antenna, and makes a great (small and safe) series of sparks in the microwave. Parts Needed: 1 Grape 1 Microwave-safe plate 1 Microwave oven
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Instructional Video9:15
Physics Girl

This thing is -270°C and is EVERYWHERE

9th - 12th
The universe is microwaving itself. A mystery signal discovered in the 1960s led to a Nobel prize. In this video, Dianna explores one of the most mysterious discoveries in physics - a constant microwave signal that seemed to be coming...
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Instructional Video4:03
Curated Video

PHYSICS - Astrophysics - The Big Bang

12th - Higher Ed
The Big Bang theory states that the Universe ‘began’ with a colossal explosion about 13,700 million years ago and has been expanding ever since. Here are two pieces of evidence for the Big Bang. Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation and...
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Instructional Video7:49
Curated Video

Hazards of Electromagnetic Radiation: Health Risks and Exposure

9th - Higher Ed
This lecture video discusses the health risks associated with exposure to electromagnetic waves on the electromagnetic spectrum. The video covers different types of electromagnetic radiation, from microwaves to X-rays and gamma rays, and...
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Instructional Video10:06
Higgsino Physics

Jump in Artificial Gravity? - 5 Physics Questions Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Physics Quiz. 5 Popular questions answered. Can you solve these questions? Why do spaceships heat up when entering earth but not when exiting?, Why can I touch aluminum foil in the oven and not get burned?, Why are we able to see air...
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Instructional Video1:41
Visual Learning Systems

Vibrations and Waves: Waves in Action

9th - 12th
This program explores the fascinating features of vibrations and waves. Vivid examples of these phenomenon help students understand how sounds are formed, how light travels, and how ocean waves move. Special attention is also given to...
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Instructional Video11:48
Professor Dave Explains

Evidence for Big Bang Cosmology

12th - Higher Ed
At the beginning of this series, we talked about the Big Bang, which was the beginning of our universe, and what happened in the early epochs thereafter. But what we didn't talk about was how we know all that stuff! What is the evidence...
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Instructional Video0:45
Curated Video

Teaser — The Most Important Instrument You've Never Heard Of

3rd - 11th
The Advanced Technology Microwave Sounder. This little-known tool affects our daily lives and helps us understand our weather and climate. Orbiting 512 miles over our head on a pair of sister satellites, ATMS helps improve weather...
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Instructional Video6:12
Curated Video

The Surface of Light (Disney Parody)

9th - 12th
The ill-fated "discovery" of primordial gravitational waves in the cosmic microwave background, explained in a cosmology rendition of Disney's "The Circle of Life" from the movie "The Lion King"

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