Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

3 Great Minds We Lost in 2018

12th - Higher Ed
We welcomed new science and discoveries in 2018, but unfortunately, we also had to say goodbye to some important figures in the scientific community.
Instructional Video3:28
SciShow

Setting Spaceships on Fire

12th - Higher Ed
What's more exciting than a spaceship? A spaceship on Fiya! NASA plans on playing with fire. Caitlin Hofmeister explains in this episode of SciShow Space!
Instructional Video10:48
PBS

Why is the Earth Round and the Milky Way Flat?

12th - Higher Ed
Our universe is not a very diverse place when it comes to shapes. Large celestial bodies become spheres, galaxies become discs, and there is little room for variation. Why is this? Well it turns out physics has some pretty strict rules...
Instructional Video5:35
SciShow

Why Does It Take So Long to Get to Mercury?

12th - Higher Ed
On a cosmic scale, Mercury isn’t very far away, but it's incredibly hard to get there. Getting into orbit around it takes years of flybys in the solar system, but we're going to do it again!
Instructional Video6:22
SciShow

3 Weird Stars You Can See with the Naked Eye

12th - Higher Ed
These three stars can easily be seen with the naked eye, but it took some fancy telescopes for us to realize how weird they really are!
Instructional Video7:51
PBS

The First Humans on Mars

12th - Higher Ed
Elon Musk's SpaceX program proposes that 100 people could be sent to colonize Mars within 10 years. What might that colony look like?
Instructional Video7:43
PBS

Does Dark Matter BREAK Physics?

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode, welcome in Matt O'Dowd as the new host to rigorously take you through the mysteries of space, time, and the nature of reality. We're starting off this new season with perhaps one of the most mysterious things of all -...
Instructional Video7:01
PBS

Is the Moon in Majora's Mask a Black Hole?

12th - Higher Ed
It's easy to take things at face value in video games. But when we take a deeper dive into the physics in The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask, it seems that the "MOON" might be one of those things that isn't quite what it seems. Given its...
Instructional Video2:22
SciShow

Dark Matter

12th - Higher Ed
Physicists estimate that dark matter accounts for about twenty three percent of the known universe - the only problem is that no one really knows what it is...
Instructional Video1:08
MinutePhysics

What is Dark Matter

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode, we discuss Dark Matter, an exotic type of matter we know very little about, despite the fact that it makes up around 80% of all matter in the universe!
Instructional Video6:33
SciShow

Is Your Brain Ready for Mars?

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to science and technology, our dream to go to Mars has almost come true! But are our brains ready for it yet?
Instructional Video4:23
SciShow

Top 10 New Species and the First Fusion Reactor

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares the week in science news, including the top 10 new species discovered in 2014, and the start of construction of the first fusion reactor. It's gonna be big!
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

Climate Change Moved the North Pole

12th - Higher Ed
The idea that the North Pole can move is nothing new, but the findings of a recent study suggest that Santa might need to pack up and find a new apartment.
Instructional Video4:15
SciShow

How to Find Dark Matter with a Billion Pendulums | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Are you there Dark Matter? It's me, a billion pendulums.
Instructional Video3:13
SciShow

Life on a Donut Planet

12th - Higher Ed
We're used to talking about planets as spherical objects, but a donut-shaped planet is theoretically possible. What would life be like on one of these?
Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

3 Ways to Save Earth from an Asteroid

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us the skinny on three plans NASA scientists have come up with to save Earth from an asteroid impact. Hopefully we'll never have to use any of them.
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

How We Learned Black Holes Actually Exist | 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know Einstein never thought we’d find actual black holes in space? It took decades of research to show black holes are physically possible, and some of the scientists behind that research were honored this year with the Nobel...
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

This Collision Could Have Created the Solar System | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
A dwarf galaxy crashing through the Milky Way billions of years ago could have set off periods of star formation, and astronomers recently captured a rare flashing phenomenon that only shows up in the sky for a few days!
Instructional Video0:43
SciShow

Why Galaxies are Fidget Spinners #shorts #science

12th - Higher Ed
Why Galaxies are Fidget Spinners #shorts #science
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

Solar Flares and a Virtual Universe

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space takes you inside solar flares, and how we've managed to get the best look at one yet, along with news about a new, Web-based simulation of the earliest days of the universe that you can explore yourself!
Instructional Video3:12
MinutePhysics

Hitting the Sun is HARD

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the orbital mechanics of why it's so hard to crash into the sun - the energy it takes to get there is astoundingly high, compared with leaving the solar system.
Instructional Video5:10
MinutePhysics

Einstein's Biggest Blunder, Explained

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how Albert Einstein made a mistake when applying the Field Equations of General Relativity to cosmology (in particular, to a static, constant density universe), and solved the problem by introducing the cosmological...
Instructional Video5:57
PBS

What Planet Is Super Mario World?

12th - Higher Ed
We've run, jumped, and stomped all over the world of Super Mario, but, where in the universe is Super Mario EXACTLY? It's virtual so it obviously DOESN'T exist but if it did, could Super Mario world be in our solar system? And what do...
Instructional Video5:34
SciShow

The Ridiculous Reasons It's Hard to Measure Sea Level

12th - Higher Ed
From problems with the moon, to the lumpiness of earth, sea levels aren't quite as exact as we have them figured out to be.