Instructional Video12:57
PBS

What’s Wrong With the Big Bang Theory? | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
Now that we have a primer on the aspects of the Big Bang Theory that we know definitely happened, let’s look further into what we don’t yet know, and how the theory could progress in the future. Since there is a discrepancy between...
Instructional Video13:10
PBS

Will the Universe Expand Forever?

12th - Higher Ed
Throughout history, there has been much speculation about what the fate of the universe would be. Many theorized that the universe would eventually succumb to the pull of gravity, and reverse its expansion in what was being called ‘The...
Instructional Video12:21
PBS

What If Dark Matter Is Just Black Holes?

12th - Higher Ed
It may be that for every star in the universe there are billions of microscopic black holes streaming through the solar system, the planet, even our bodies every second. Sounds horrible - but hey, at least we’d have explained dark matter.
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

What Are These Weird Rings In Space?

12th - Higher Ed
Over the past few years, astronomers have discovered their own kind of UFO called Odd Radio Circles, aka ORCs. They're a little too round, and a little too invisible at non-radio wavelengths, to immediately know what they are and what's...
Instructional Video6:08
SciShow

More on Mating & Monogamy

12th - Higher Ed
Hank clarifies the misconceptions about Chagus disease, discusses a couple of interesting celestial events - one that happened in the past and one that will happen in the distant future, and sheds more light on the benefits of sexual...
News Clip2:39
Curated Video

USA: NASA GAMMA RAYS DISCOVERY

Higher Ed
English/Nat NASA scientists have discovered a new class of gamma ray sources in the Milky Way galaxy. Gamma rays, although invisible to the human eye, are the most powerful form of light - more than a hundred million times more powerful...
Instructional Video22:24
SciShow

Why It Took a Decade to Launch The James Webb Space Telescope | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
The James Webb Space Telescope has launched! But it was a very long road to get to this point, and we’ve been following the progress for a decade!
Instructional Video14:24
Crash Course

The Big Bang: Crash Course Big History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green, Hank Green, and Emily Graslie teach you about, well, everything. Big History is the history of everything. We're going to start with the Big Bang, take you right through all of history (recorded and otherwise), and...
Instructional Video3:12
MinutePhysics

Why is the Solar System Flat?

12th - Higher Ed
Why is the Solar System Flat?
Instructional Video9:58
SciShow

10 Things We Didn't Know 100 Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
In just the last century, we've made an astounding amount of scientific progress. And thanks to some of that progress, we can now share 10 of those discoveries with you in a video on the internet!
Instructional Video6:08
SciShow

More on Mating & Monogamy

12th - Higher Ed
Hank clarifies the misconceptions about Chagus disease, discusses a couple of interesting celestial events - one that happened in the past and one that will happen in the distant future, and sheds more light on the benefits of sexual...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

How to Kill a Galaxy

12th - Higher Ed
Our Milky Way galaxy is alive and well, producing new stars all the time. But there’s another group of galaxies out there, populated only by venerable red dwarf stars - the young stars are nowhere to be seen. In effect, these galaxies...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Three ways the universe could end - Venus Keus

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Our universe started with the Big Bang, but how will it end? Explore cosmologists’ three possible scenarios: the Big Crunch, the Big Freeze and the Big Rip. -- We know about our universe’s past: the Big Bang theory predicts that all...
Instructional Video9:36
SciShow

5 Baffling Mysteries About the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
At the beginning of the 20th century, many scientists thought that we had learned all there was to know about physics. The problem is, the better we get at measuring things and building models of our universe, the more we discover that...
Instructional Video14:56
TED Talks

TED: The search for the invisible matter that shapes the universe | Chanda Prescod-Weinstein

12th - Higher Ed
The universe that we know, with its luminous stars and orbiting planets, is largely made up of elements we can't actually see -- like dark energy and dark matter -- and therefore don't fully understand. Theoretical physicist Chanda...
Instructional Video9:25
SciShow

4 Tiny Missions Answering the Biggest Questions in Astrophysics

12th - Higher Ed
The Astrophysics Pioneers program is funding four innovative new missions that read like a best-hits album of the most exciting astronomical frontiers: from galaxy evolution and exoplanets, to neutron star mergers and astroparticle physics.
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

Why Astronomy Hasn't Really Changed Since the 1900s

12th - Higher Ed
The way modern researchers study the sky hasn’t really changed in the last few centuries. For the most part, astronomers still study things by analyzing their light.
Instructional Video4:40
SciShow

What If the Universe Isn't Uniform?

12th - Higher Ed
According to the cosmological principle, the universe is more or less the same in all directions. But what happens when we put this to the test?
Instructional Video12:28
PBS

Dark Flow

12th - Higher Ed
Why does the universe seem to be moving in one particular direction?
Instructional Video2:53
MinutePhysics

Why Doesn't Time Flow Backwards? (Big Picture Ep. 1/5)

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to Google Making and Science for supporting this series, and to Sean Carroll for collaborating on it! AMAZING Interactive Entropy explainer by Aatish Bhatia: http://aatishb.github.io/entropy/ This video is about why entropy gives...
Instructional Video5:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the universe expanding into? - Sajan Saini

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The universe began in a Big Bang nearly fourteen billion years ago, and has been expanding ever since. But how does the universe expand and what is it expanding into? Sajan Saini explains the existing theories around the Big Bang and...
Instructional Video9:28
PBS

How Much Information is in the Universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Billions of galaxies, each with billions of stars, each with .... rather a lot of particles in them. And then there's dark matter, black holes, planets, and the particles and radiation in between the stars and galaxies. But.... is the...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

The Milky Way's Black Hole Burped 3.5 Million Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
The black hole at the center of the Milky Way is quiet now, but new evidence suggests that it woke up around 3.5 million years ago. And Enceladus may have the the building blocks of the building blocks of life.
Instructional Video12:37
PBS

How Will the Universe End?

12th - Higher Ed
We live in an unusual age - the age when the stars still shine. We should count ourselves lucky - nearly all of future history will be dark. But events will still unfold in that long, cooling darkness, and civilizations may endure. So...