Instructional Video5:03
Science ABC

Hawking Radiation Explained: What Exactly Was Stephen Hawking Famous For?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Hawking radiation was first discovered by English scientist Stephen Hawking in 1974. Prior to this discovery, our knowledge of black holes was very limited. It was believed that black holes were completely black and that they did not...
Instructional Video9:54
Science ABC

Quantum Entanglement: Explained in REALLY SIMPLE Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Quantum entanglement is a physical resource, like energy, that is possible between quantum systems. When a coin spins on a flat surface, its in a state of superposition between its two faceshead and tails. Similarly, electrons in their...
Instructional Video6:12
Science ABC

What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: Explained in Simple Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Heisenbergs uncertainty principle says that if we know everything about where a particle is located, we know nothing about its momentum. Conversely, if we know everything about its momentum, then we know nothing about where the particle...
Instructional Video0:33
Curated Video

Electron

6th - 12th
The tiny particles within all atoms that carry a negative electric charge. A Twig Science Glossary Film. Key scientific terms defined in just 60 seconds using stunning images and concise textual definitions. Twig Science Glossary Films...
Instructional Video1:37
Curated Video

Factpack: Structure of the Atom

6th - 12th
The different ways scientists have explained the structure of the atom, and how it has changed throughout history. Chemistry - Atoms And Bonding - Learning Points. A Twig FactPack Film. Open a discussion on what has been already learnt...
Instructional Video3:30
Curated Video

Number Theory: Gauss

6th - 12th
How Gauss found the sum of all the numbers between 1 and 100, in a matter of seconds, aged just seven! He had developed a formula for triangular numbers, and went on to be hailed as the Prince of Mathematics as he moved on to more...
Instructional Video1:46
Let's Tute

What is Quantum Computing & How it Works

9th - Higher Ed
In today’s video, we’re diving deep into the fascinating world of Augmented Reality (AR). We’ll explore what AR is and how it's poised to revolutionize our everyday lives. With its rapid growth, AR is set to transform various industries,...
Instructional Video14:11
Curated Video

Why Did Einstein Hate Randomness?

9th - Higher Ed
How random are things, really? Well, at the tiny level of photons, randomness might be key to their existence. Einstein could not accept this and famously held the paraphrased opinion that, ‘God does not play dice with the universe’. In...
Instructional Video3:19
Higgsino Physics

Does Quantum Mechanics Apply to Large Objects?

12th - Higher Ed
Why Quantum mechanics applies to more than just the smallest particles. And how quantum mehcnaics converges to the classical limit depending on the de brogile wavelength. We explore the double slit experiment and discover bucky balls...
Instructional Video8:08
Curated Video

What Is Quantum Machine Learning? | TensorFlow Quantum

Higher Ed
Getting back into the AI 101 videos this month, with quantum machine learning! We’ll be talking about what exactly quantum machine learning is, and walking through a TensorFlow tutorial together in Colab.
Instructional Video3:45
Curated Video

Testing Reality

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum physicist Artur Ekert, University of Oxford and NUS, relates how the now-famous Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen thought experiment was generally ignored for decades before John Bell pointed the way towards a key experiment to test it...
Instructional Video3:31
Curated Video

Supersymmetric Convictions

12th - Higher Ed
Particle physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed (Institute for Advanced Study) relates his belief that supersymmetry must exist at some energy scale.
Instructional Video3:04
Curated Video

Suddenly Fashionable

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Laureate Antony Leggett, University of Illinois, describes how the field of foundations of quantum theory changed from being a "fringe activity" to one squarely within the academic mainstream thanks to the work of a few "mavericks".
Instructional Video4:22
Curated Video

Rigidity and Fragility

12th - Higher Ed
Particle physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed ​​​​​​​(Institute for Advanced Study) describes how physics' two guiding principles demonstrate both rigidity and fragility,
Instructional Video3:58
Curated Video

Ignoring the Multiverse

12th - Higher Ed
Princeton University physicist Paul Steinhardt describes how many cosmologists simply ignore one of the most pronounced problems with the theory of cosmic inflation.
Instructional Video4:19
Curated Video

Fundamental Mysteries

12th - Higher Ed
Caltech theoretical physicist and Nobel Laureate David Politzer shares his excitement at re-appraising information loss in black holes and re-examining the mathematics of gauge theories.
Instructional Video3:14
Curated Video

Asking The Right Questions

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Laureate Antony Leggett describes his gut feeling that cosmology is ripe for a major revolution, and describes why he is not particularly sympathetic to the field of "quantum cosmology".
Instructional Video3:07
Curated Video

A Mysterious Relationship

12th - Higher Ed
Particle physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed (Institute for Advanced Study) examines the curious structural relationship between quantum mechanics and relativity.
Instructional Video2:56
Curated Video

Quantum Information

12th - Higher Ed
Physics Nobel Laureate Anthony Leggett (Illinois) gives a brief overview of quantum information theory.
Instructional Video2:40
Curated Video

Feynman's Belt

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Laureate David Politzer, Caltech, recalls a memorable discussion with the celebrated physicist Richard Feynman who uses his belt to demonstrate the spin-statistics theorem of quantum physics.
Instructional Video4:33
Curated Video

Strongly Constrained

12th - Higher Ed
Particle physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed (Instutute for Advanced Study) describes how today's theorists have much less room to manoeuvre than is often supposed.
Instructional Video5:47
Curated Video

Looking to the Past

12th - Higher Ed
Particle physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed (Institute for Advanced Study) describes his intriguing prescription for how we might make progress in fundamental physics without experiment to guide us.
Instructional Video4:40
Curated Video

Distracted by Language

12th - Higher Ed
Particle physicist Nima Arkani-Hamed, Institute for Advanced Study, describes how we must make sure that we don't distract ourselves by the language that we use to describe the physical world, and must instead simply focus on precisely...
Instructional Video3:02
Curated Video

Wrestling with Quantum Theory

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Laureate Anthony Leggett (Illinois) highlights some of the difficulties with quantum mechanics.