Instructional Video15:40
PBS

The Alchemy of Neutron Star Collisions

12th - Higher Ed
Carl Sagan’s famous words: “We are star stuff” refers to a mind-blowing idea – that most atomic nuclei in our bodies were created in the nuclear furnace and the explosive deaths of stars that lived in the ancient universe. In recent...
Instructional Video11:19
SciShow

7 Organisms That Can Clean Toxic Waste

12th - Higher Ed
Toxic waste, by definition, is harmful to living things, but there are actually a bunch of plants, animals, fungi, and microbes that can help us clean it up! Hosted by: Olivia Gordon
Instructional Video11:29
SciShow

7 Organisms That Can Clean Toxic Waste

12th - Higher Ed
Toxic waste, by definition, is harmful to living things, but there are actually a bunch of plants, animals, fungi, and microbes that can help us clean it up! Chapters OYSTER MUSHROOMS 0:49 SUNFLOWERS 3:06 3 BIVALVES 5:11 BONFIRE MOSS...
Instructional Video5:24
SciShow

The Real Philosopher's Stone: Turning Lead into Gold

12th - Higher Ed
With scientists’ efforts and their creativity, we finally found “the real philosopher’s stone.” That's right, we can now turn lead into gold... a little bit.
Instructional Video5:49
Curated Video

What Have Sunflowers Got To Do With Nuclear Disasters?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Sunflowers are the international symbol for nuclear disarmament. You will most likely find sunflowers around areas where nuclear disasters have occurred in the past. Following the 1986 meltdown at the Chernobyl Power Plant in Ukraine,...
Instructional Video8:37
Curated Video

Applications of Ionizing Radiation: Uses of Radioactivity for Our Benefit

9th - Higher Ed
The video discusses various applications of ionizing radiation in our daily life, including irradiation of food, sterilization of equipment, smoke alarms, thickness gauging, and medical applications like tracers, PET scanners, and cancer...
Instructional Video4:15
FuseSchool

PHYSICS - What Are Radioactive Isotopes - Properties of Matter

6th - Higher Ed
The identity and chemical properties of any atom are determined by the number of protons in its nucleus. As atoms get bigger and heavier, the nuclei get bigger and heavier and the protons need a “nuclear glue” to help hold them together....
Instructional Video4:30
FuseSchool

What Are Radioactive Isotopes?

6th - Higher Ed
Learn the basics about radioactive isotopes. The identity and chemical properties of any atom are determined by the number of protons in its nucleus. As atoms get bigger and heavier, the nuclei get bigger and heavier and the protons need...
Instructional Video2:42
Encyclopaedia Britannica

Radioactive Tracers

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Overview of the use of radioactive isotopes in medicine to diagnose certain ailments.
Instructional Video4:22
FuseSchool

What Are Radioactive Isotopes (radionuclides)

6th - Higher Ed
Learn the basics about radioactive isotopes? how they are created? and what chemical reactions are created? Find out more in this video!
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

Why Do Hospitals Have Particle Accelerators?

6th - Higher Ed Standards
Viewers gain insight into medical technology with a short video that examines how PET scanners can track FGD injected into a patient's body to find tumors.
Instructional Video4:25
American Chemical Society

What Are Isotopes? Chemistry Basics

9th - Higher Ed Standards
Use animations to explain the concept of an isotope. Young scholars view a lesson from the Reaction series dedicated to isotopes. They learn what an isotope is and why they are important to complete a great back-to-basics lesson.
Instructional Video5:29
Be Smart

How Atom Bombs Can Uncover Forged Art

6th - 12th Standards
Art forgeries are works of art themselves? How can inspectors tell real art from fake? A video from the a large science playlist explores the techniques practiced by expert forgers and the subtle science behind telling a masterpiece from...
Instructional Video4:53
JFR Science

Isotopes and Half-Life: What Are Medical Isotopes?

9th - Higher Ed Standards
How do medical professionals use radiation without doing more harm than good? Budding nuclear chemists begin their study of all things radioactive with a video from the JFR Science playlist. Topics include differences between isotopes,...
Instructional Video3:01
Veritasium

Radiation vs. Radioactive Atoms

9th - 12th Standards
Why are people afraid of nuclear power plants? A video in the Veritasium playlist explains that radiation doesn't travel very far, yet people still worry. Then it discusses the possible release of radioactive atoms, which do travel a...
Instructional Video9:02
The Brain Scoop

Death Rocks

6th - 12th Standards
If you're into death metal, this video's for you! Young geologists can rock out with a variety of deadly minerals, including asbestos and cinnabar, in this installment in Brain Scoop's playlist on fossils and geology. The narrator...
Instructional Video8:51
Teacher's Pet

Radiation and Radioactivity

9th - 12th Standards
Explore the science of radioactivity! A very thorough video lesson begins with an explanation of the chemical structure of radiation. It includes descriptions of benefits of radioactivity and half-life calculations.
Instructional Video12:36
Crash Course

A Brief History of the Universe

9th - Higher Ed
No one was actually there to see the birth of the universe, but years of collaboration between physicists and mathematicians allow us to glimpse all but a fraction of a second of it. A narrated journey shows the phase changes...
Instructional Video4:29
Fuse School

What are Radioactive Isotopes (Radionuclides)

9th - 12th
Create a little excitement with a radioactive resource! An engaging lesson builds a solid understanding of the nature of radioactive isotopes. The narrator explains the desire of a nucleus to become stable, which leads to radioactive...
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

History’s Deadliest Colors

6th - 12th
Zounds! Who'da thunk it? Colors can be deadly. Viewers learn about the dangers of white (lead), green (radium and cupric hydrogen arsenic), and orange (uranium oxide) pigments used in clothing, ceramics, and home decor.
Instructional Video11:17
TED-Ed

The Most Radioactive Places on Earth

9th - 12th
Who receives that greatest amount of radioactive exposure? After visiting some of the most radioactive places on earth, including Chernobyl and Fukushima, viewers consider the exposure of radiation workers, astronauts, and cancer...
Instructional Video2:09
1
1
Ricochet Science

Isotopes

9th - 12th
Altering the subatomic nature of an atom affects its properties. The video illustrates the idea of an isotope using Carbon-12, Carbon-13, and Carbon-14 as examples. 
Instructional Video5:20
TED-Ed

Is Radiation Dangerous?

7th - 12th
Not all radiation is hazardous. Electromagnetic radiation is pure energy. Nuclear radiation comes from the atomic nucleus in which isotopes become unstable and radioactive. Share this video with your class to explore the types of...
Instructional Video7:13
Educreations

Uses of Radioactivity

9th - 12th Standards
Radioactivity is often perceived as dangerous and a threat to our well-being, but you may be surprised at the different applications of this natural chemical process. From the smoke detectors in our homes to treatments for cancer,...