Instructional Video2:27
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Car Crashes

12th - Higher Ed
How is the chemical energy of gasoline transformed into kinetic energy of a moving car? And where does that kinetic energy go when the car crashes into something and stops moving?
Instructional Video11:49
TED Talks

TED: A futuristic vision for Latin America, rooted in ancient design | Catalina Lotero

12th - Higher Ed
What would Latin America look like if colonization hadn't interrupted its ancient civilizations? Imagining a future where ancestral knowledge intertwines with modern aesthetics, designer Catalina Lotero shows how "pre-Columbian futurism"...
Instructional Video3:30
Bozeman Science

Mass and Energy

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how mass can be converted to energy and energy can be converted to mass. The equation E=mc2 can be used to determine the amount of energy released from nuclear processes.
Instructional Video13:30
TED Talks

Roger Hanlon: The amazing brains and morphing skin of octopuses and other cephalopods

12th - Higher Ed
Octopus, squid and cuttlefish -- collectively known as cephalopods -- have strange, massive, distributed brains. What do they do with all that neural power? Dive into the ocean with marine biologist Roger Hanlon, who shares astonishing...
Instructional Video10:30
PBS

Telling Time on a Torus

12th - Higher Ed
What shape do you most associate with a standard analog clock? Your reflex answer might be a circle, but a more natural answer is actually a torus. Surprised? Then stick around.
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

The History, and Future, of Space Suits

12th - Higher Ed
Reid Reimers explains one of the often-overlooked technologies that humans need to live in, and explore, space: space suits. Learn about the hundred-year history of the pressurized suit, and see what the future of space couture might...
Instructional Video5:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What happened to antimatter? - Rolf Landua

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Particles come in pairs, which is why there should be an equal amount of matter and antimatter in the universe. Yet, scientists have not been able to detect any in the visible universe. Where is this missing antimatter? CERN scientist...
Instructional Video5:59
TED Talks

TED: Don't eat the marshmallow! | Joachim de Posada

12th - Higher Ed
In this short talk from TED U, Joachim de Posada shares a landmark experiment on delayed gratification -- and how it can predict future success. With priceless video of kids trying their hardest not to eat the marshmallow.
Instructional Video3:09
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Car Crashes

12th - Higher Ed
How is the chemical energy of gasoline transformed into kinetic energy of a moving car? And where does that kinetic energy go when the car crashes into something and stops moving?
Instructional Video5:20
SciShow

How We Could Beat Childhood Peanut Allergies | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
More and more kids are avoiding peanut butter due to life threatening allergies, but we could make it so that no kid goes without a PBJ
Instructional Video2:54
SciShow

These Lice Dive Kilometers Under the Ocean!

12th - Higher Ed
Lice don’t just thrive in the biomes of body hair and fur, they can also live in a place that seems like it should be bug-free: the oceans.
Instructional Video1:50
SciShow

Electric Airplanes for the Future!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us the outcome of the 2011 Green Flight Challenge and tells us why electric airplanes are the future of air travel.
Instructional Video17:35
TED Talks

Gero Miesenboeck: Re-engineering the brain

12th - Higher Ed
In the quest to map the brain, many scientists have attempted the incredibly daunting task of recording the activity of each neuron. Gero Miesenboeck works backward -- manipulating specific neurons to figure out exactly what they do,...
Instructional Video17:09
TED Talks

Carolyn Porco: This is Saturn

12th - Higher Ed
Planetary scientist Carolyn Porco shows images from the Cassini voyage to Saturn, focusing on its largest moon, Titan, and on frozen Enceladus, which seems to shoot jets of ice.
Instructional Video6:42
PBS

What Will Destroy Planet Earth?

12th - Higher Ed
Killing all the life on Earth is easy. But what about destroying the planet itself? That is DEFINITELY going to happen!! But HOW? Could it be Nukes? A Giant Asteroid? A Collision with another planet? And what's more, will anyone be...
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

The Tiny Planet Revealing Gravity’s Big Secrets

12th - Higher Ed
Mercury’s path through our solar system is, well, a little eccentric, and some of its movements were a mystery astronomers couldn’t explain for a long time. Then, in the early 20th century, Einstein reran the numbers and proved a whole...
Instructional Video6:15
Bozeman Science

Equivalence Principle

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how inertial mass and gravitational mass are equivalent. He shows you too simple methods for calculated individual inertial mass and gravitational mass. Albert Einstein used this principle to build...
Instructional Video3:06
MinutePhysics

What Is The Shape of Space? (ft. PhD Comics)

12th - Higher Ed
A collaboration with Jorge Cham and Daniel Whiteson, check out "We Have No Idea" at http://www.wehavenoidea.com Jorge's PhDComics: http://www.phdcomics.com This video is about the local and global geometry and curvature of space and...
Instructional Video7:00
Bozeman Science

Work and Energy

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the mechanical energy added or removed from a system results from work. For work to occur a force must act parallel to the displacement of the system. Since work and energy are equivalent the...
Instructional Video9:10
Bozeman Science

Impulse

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen defines impulse as the product of the force applied and the time over which the force is applied. The impulse of an object is equivalent to the change in momentum of the object. Several problems related to...
Instructional Video7:07
Be Smart

How Big is the Solar System?

12th - Higher Ed
I took a trip to one of Austin's famous moontowers so I could put the enormity of our solar system into perspective. With the help of a grapefruit, and a lot of walking, you'll get an idea of just how tiny everything is out there!!
Instructional Video5:33
Curated Video

Azimuthal Quantum Number: Shaping Electron Orbits

9th - Higher Ed
Characterised by the symbol 𝑙l, the azimuthal quantum number is a fundamental parameter in quantum mechanics that describes the angular momentum and form of an electron's orbital within an atom. The integer values it accepts range from 0...
Instructional Video4:46
Curated Video

Landmarks - Sydney Harbour Bridge

12th - Higher Ed
SYDNEY HARBOUR BRIDGE THE SYDNEY HARBOUR BRIDGE IS AUSTRALIA S BEST KNOWN LANDMARK. IT IS THE BIGGEST, BUT NOT THE LONGEST, STEEL ARCH BRIDGE IN THE WORLD. AT ITS HIGHEST POINT, THE ARCH REACHES 134 METRES OVER SEA LEVEL.
Instructional Video5:57
Curated Video

What is a Discounted Cash Flow - DCF?

10th - Higher Ed
Creating a business case and an investment appraisal is essential at the start of your project. And many organizations specify that the investment appraisal uses a DCF (Discounted Cash Flow) methodology. So, in this video, I answer the...