Instructional Video10:02
SciShow

How Much of the Periodic Table is in YOU?

12th - Higher Ed
About 99.9% of your typical human body is made of just 11 elements from the periodic table. But hiding in that remaining 0.1% are some elements that do some very important jobs to keep you alive and healthy. Including some elements you...
Instructional Video7:46
SciShow

This Crystal Is ELECTRIC

12th - Higher Ed
There's a few minerals that exhibit something called piezoelectricity and pyroelectricity, which mean that either heat or pressure can turn them electric. Here's a demo from the SciShow Rocks Box where you can see this for yourself - all...
Instructional Video15:32
PBS

How Are Quasiparticles Different From Particles?

12th - Higher Ed
The device you’re watching this video on is best understood by thinking about positive and negative charges moving around a circuit of diodes and transistors. But the only elementary particle actually flowing in the circuit is the...
Instructional Video9:39
SciShow

5 Inventions Showing Us the Future of Solar Energy

12th - Higher Ed
When you imagine the energy of the future, solar power is probably in the picture – but in recent years, less than 2% of the world’s electricity has come from solar power. Here are 5 new inventions that are likely to change that.
Instructional Video9:12
SciShow

If the Asteroid Hit 10 Minutes Later...

12th - Higher Ed
If the 10 kilometer wide asteroid that hit the Earth 66 million years ago hit just a few minutes later, would the outcome of the living creatures here have been different?
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

The Science of a Selfie

12th - Higher Ed
Taking photos used to require technical knowledge and time in a lab, but now we have electronic devices in our pockets that do all of the work for us. How do these miracle devices do it? Hosted by: Olivia Gordon
Instructional Video8:43
SciShow

Moore's Law and The Secret World Of Ones And Zeroes

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explains how SciShow exists -- and everything else that's ever been made or used on a computer -- by exploring how transistors work together in circuits to make all computing possible. Like all kinds of science, it has its...
Instructional Video4:51
SciShow

Is Glass a Liquid?

12th - Higher Ed
Hosted by: Hank Green
Instructional Video3:25
SciShow

Mendeleev's Periodic Table

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us about the awesomeness of the periodic table and the genius of the man who invented it.
Instructional Video3:08
SciShow

Why You Can't Bake a Mason Jar

12th - Higher Ed
Regular old glass like the kind that makes up a mason jar can shatter and explode if put in the oven. But we do have types of glass that you can bake your pie or brownies in and it's all thanks to some neat chemical tricks.
Instructional Video3:28
SciShow

Quantum Computing Breakthrough

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum physics is weird. But quantum computing could be awesome! Learn how scientists took a big leap this week toward making quantum computers a reality.
Instructional Video2:58
MinutePhysics

Solar Panels Made With a Particle Accelerator?!

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about using particle accelerators as part of the solar panel silicon wafer manufacturing process. The accelerators embed protons into the wafer crystals, allowing them to break and separate from the main crystal in much...
Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

The Strange Case of the Hypatia Stone

12th - Higher Ed
The Hypatia stone is one of the weirdest rocks on the planet. It's not just out of this world, it might be out of this solar system!
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

Solar-Powered Plane and Contagious Shellfish Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
A plane fueled only by the sun is flying around the world and a certain cancer in shellfish is contagious! Olivia Gordon explains these stories in this week's SciShow News.
Instructional Video2:41
SciShow

Why Is My Whiteboard So Dirty?

12th - Higher Ed
If you have an old, well-used whiteboard in your classroom, you might see something a little strange -- ghosts! But not the spooky, bust-able kind... these are the ghosts of lectures past!
Instructional Video14:49
TED Talks

TED: We can reprogram life. How to do it wisely | Juan enriquez

12th - Higher Ed
For four billion years, what lived and died on earth depended on two principles: natural selection and random mutation. Then humans came along and changed everything - hybridizing plants, breeding animals, altering the environment and...
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Sensor That Dissolves in Your Brain

12th - Higher Ed
In this week's SciShow News, we discuss two new types of sensors being developed. One tracks the content of certain molecules in your sweat while you exercise and the other is a brain implant that can be resorbed once it has finished its...
Instructional Video6:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: If superpowers were real: Body mass - Joy Lin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What if manipulating body mass wasn't just the stuff of epic comic book stories? Is it scientifically possible to manipulate your body mass? In this series, Joy Lin tackles six superpowers and reveals just how scientifically realistic...
Instructional Video10:17
SciShow

DNA: Not Just for Life Anymore!

12th - Higher Ed
Our DNA stores the information that makes us who we are, but that's not all it can do! There are applications for DNA that go way beyond its use for life, like storing data and folding it into complicated shapes.
Instructional Video3:47
SciShow

Asteroid Fly-By!

12th - Higher Ed
Today Emily Graslie of The Brain Scoop gives us the news about a couple of near- misses for our planet and an update on where astronomers think habitable life might be found in other star systems.
Instructional Video4:08
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why is glass transparent? - Mark Miodownik

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you look through your glasses, binoculars or a window, you see the world on the other side. How is it that something so solid can be so invisible? Mark Miodownik melts the scientific secret behind amorphous solids.
Instructional Video6:35
Be Smart

Title: The Recipe For Life

12th - Higher Ed
If the human body could be distilled down into one molecule, what would our chemical formula be? And WHY is it that way? There’s a whole lot of elements on the periodic table, but life depends on relatively few of them in order to...
Instructional Video11:57
TED Talks

Karl Skjonnemand: The self-assembling computer chips of the future

12th - Higher Ed
The transistors that power the phone in your pocket are unimaginably small: you can fit more than 3,000 of them across the width of a human hair. But to keep up with innovations in fields like facial recognition and augmented reality, we...
Instructional Video12:29
Crash Course

Integrated Circuits & Moore’s Law: Crash Course Computer Science

12th - Higher Ed
So you may have heard of Moore's Law and while it isn't truly a law it has pretty closely estimated a trend we've seen in the advancement of computing technologies. Moore's Law states that we'll see approximately a 2x increase in...