Instructional Video14:20
SciShow

Holes In Space That Aren't Black | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve talked a lot about black holes, but there are other kinds of space holes out there that deserve some time in the spotlight!
Instructional Video13:57
SciShow

Why Does Physics Love Donuts? | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
Unfortunately, the universe isn't made of sugarcoated fried dough. However, here are a few ways donuts are still managing to find their way into the physical world.
Instructional Video10:11
SciShow

Five Of The Biggest, Baddest Supernova Varieties

12th - Higher Ed
Supernovae are only rare to the passive stargazer, but if you’re an astronomer studying them, you get to see some of the most brilliant explosions in the universe. Here are five of the most significant supernovae known to science.
Instructional Video14:56
SciShow

A Big Bang Beginner’s Guide | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
While there's still a lot that astrophysicists don't know about the Big Bang, there are some things we do know. So today, let's get caught up on the Big Bang basics.
Instructional Video5:51
SciShow

Atlas: The Little Rocket That Still Can

12th - Higher Ed
In 1962, John Glenn went into orbit on an Atlas rocket, and thus began a family of rockets that lasted for 60 years!
Instructional Video11:33
SciShow

The Future of the Search for Life

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have found more than 5,000 planets in the last three decades, but that’s not nearly as exciting as potentially coming across the first extraterrestrial creatures. And we may finally be in a position to make that discovery.
Instructional Video5:40
SciShow

Hayabusa: The Artificial Meteor Launched From An Asteroid

12th - Higher Ed
After we retrieved samples of the moon, it was quite a while before we could land on anything else and bring bits of it back home.
Instructional Video4:44
SciShow

How Distant Stars Let Us See the Solar System Up Close

12th - Higher Ed
Occultations may sound spooky, but in actuality they can inform us of some of the most unknown parts of the universe.
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

The Mystery of the Star That Wasn't There

12th - Higher Ed
In the 1970s, astronomers discovered a mysterious source of gamma rays that, 50 years later, still hasn’t revealed all of its secrets.
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

The Ominous Reason Phobos Has Lines on It

12th - Higher Ed
Mars’s moon, Phobos, is striped with grooves all across its surface. But if one theory about where they came from is true, does that mean this moon might be on its way out?
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

Where Did Mercury’s Spots Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
The Sun isn’t the only celestial body in the solar system to boast spots of its own. Mercury, too, has its fair share, and they’re worth wondering about.
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow

How Do You Date a Star?

12th - Higher Ed
Figuring out the age of a blinking speck in the sky is a difficult feat, especially if considering how many types of stars there are. This is where a Hertzsprung-Russell meets a gyrochronologist.
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

Great Minds: Conny Aerts, the Starquake Professor

12th - Higher Ed
While doing some light reading of data from a telescope, Conny Aerts made a breakthrough that allowed her to lead the charge in the field of asteroseismology and win her the 2022 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics.
Instructional Video5:14
SciShow

The Spacecraft That Wasn't Designed To Land, But Did

12th - Higher Ed
Many space missions take billions of dollars and decades of work to get develop, but 25 years ago this spacecraft delivered stunning results on a shoestring budget and a minimal development timeline.
Instructional Video4:57
SciShow

Life on an 8-Hour Planet

12th - Higher Ed
Even if we find an earth-sized exoplanet, how can we be so sure that we're looking at earth 2.0? It might come down to how fast it's spinning.
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

Early Earth Microbes May Have Eaten Raw Meteorites

12th - Higher Ed
Is it possible that life on earth began with an out of this world rock buffet?
Instructional Video6:01
SciShow

Earth’s other moons

12th - Higher Ed
You're familiar with the Moon, but it's not only our moon, depending on your point of view.
Instructional Video6:18
SciShow

Are Space Sounds Lies?

12th - Higher Ed
If a tree falls in space, and it's frequency is modulated by multiple octaves and digitized, does it make a sound?
Instructional Video4:58
SciShow

How Do You Find the Moon’s Best Picnic Spot?

12th - Higher Ed
Living on the moon won't be easy, but it might be worth taking a note from our ancestors, and setting up in caves
Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

How Blocking the Sun Makes Mars Hotter

12th - Higher Ed
If we’re going to send people to Mars someday, we’re going to need to be very conscious of the challenges presented in this endeavor. And at the top of that list is the ferocious nature of dust on the barren planet.
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

This Year in Space News (That Isn't JWST)

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve been distracted looking at the amazing photos The James Webb Space Telescope has taken, not to worry. Here are three other stellar stories from the last year of space science!
Instructional Video6:41
SciShow

Space Superlatives of 2022

12th - Higher Ed
As we wrap up 2022, we'd like to celebrate a few of the cosmic “winners” discovered this year, at least while they still hold their titles.
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

Did Earth's Continents Come from Space?

12th - Higher Ed
Earth didn't always have the land beneath your feet, but what might have caused it to form is a bit of a mystery.
Instructional Video5:50
SciShow

What's Going to Space in 2023?

12th - Higher Ed
2022 was a pretty exciting year for space science, but what news might we expect in the coming year?