Instructional Video1:57
MinutePhysics

Is the Universe Entirely Mathematical feat. Max Tegmark

12th - Higher Ed
Is the Universe Entirely Mathematical feat. Max Tegmark
Instructional Video1:14
MinutePhysics

Theory of Everything - What is Matter?

12th - Higher Ed
What is matter, anyway? What does it have to do with math? And why aren't you made of Jesus? Delving deeper into the theory of (almost) everything - the Standard Model of particle physics.
Instructional Video13:16
SciShow

Why Does Everything Decay Into Lead

12th - Higher Ed
If you look at a copy of the periodic table, you might notice that basically every element after lead is labelled as radioactive. And the vast majority of those elements wind up decaying into some version of lead eventually. But why is...
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

The Moon is Rusting. It's the Earth's Fault.

12th - Higher Ed
The Moon is typically 380,000-ish kilometers from the Earth, so it doesn't seem like they have that much of a direct influence on one another. However, the presence of hematite on the lunar surface suggests our planet is causing the Moon...
Instructional Video6:17
SciShow

Does Antimatter Fall?

12th - Higher Ed
In September 2023, a group of scientists from CERN published the first results from the ALPHA-g experiment, which seeks to figure out how antimatter responds to the force of gravity. Does it fall like regular matter? Does it not interact...
Instructional Video6:30
SciShow

This Element Doesn't Fit the Periodic Table

12th - Higher Ed
One of the most famous elements in the periodic table doesn't really belong anywhere chemists would like to put it.
Instructional Video11:19
SciShow

Mercury Shouldn't Be Liquid. But It Is.

12th - Higher Ed
Mercury, a.k.a. quicksilver, is famous for being a liquid at room temperature...and also below room temperature. But you can't use a high school chem class to explain why. Instead, we need a little help from Einstein.
Instructional Video6:05
SciShow

How to Make a Dark Matter Planet

12th - Higher Ed
Dark Matter is the most abundant form of matter in the known universe, so what's keeping it from forming into planets?
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 Video12:50
PBS

Where Are The Worlds In Many Worlds?

12th - Higher Ed
Many Worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics proposes that every time a quantum event gets decided, the universe splits so that every possible outcome really does occur. But where exactly are those worlds, and can we ever see them?
Instructional Video15:35
PBS

What Makes The Strong Force Strong?

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum mechanics gets weirder as you go to smaller sizes and higher energies. It’s strange enough for atoms, but positively bizarre when we get to the atomic nucleus. And today we’re going nuclear, as we dive into the weird world of...
Instructional Video9:10
PBS

Pulsar Starquakes Make Fast Radio Bursts? + Challenge Winners! | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
Fast Radio Bursts were puzzling physicist for quite some time. They were thought to be the result of large cataclysmic events such as supernovae, but this theory was proven wrong when it was discovered that they could repeat themselves....
Instructional Video14:39
PBS

How Do Quantum States Manifest In The Classical World?

12th - Higher Ed
In quantum world things are routinely in multiple states at once - what we call a “superposition” of states. But in the classical world of large scales, things are either this or that. The famous thought experiment is Schrodinger’s cat -...
Instructional Video12:48
PBS

Zeno's Paradox & The Quantum Zeno Effect

12th - Higher Ed
“A moving arrow is at rest.” This is obviously a nonsensical contradiction. But Zeno, a Greek philosopher famous for his metaphysical trolling, devised a paradox whose conclusion is just this. Here’s how it goes: if you look at an arrow...
Instructional Video12:43
PBS

What Happens During a Quantum Jump?

12th - Higher Ed
Since the very beginning of quantum mechanics, a debate has raged about how to interpret its bizarre predictions. And at the heart and origin of that debate is the quantum jump or quantum leap - the seemingly miraculous and instantaneous...
Instructional Video10:19
PBS

The Quantum Experiment that Broke Reality | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
The double slit experiment radically changed the way we understand reality. Find out what the ramifications of this experiment were and how we can use it to better comprehend our universe.
Instructional Video12:14
TED Talks

TED: The molecular love story that could help power the world | Olivia Breese

12th - Higher Ed
The key to revolutionizing the world's energy landscape may lie in an unlikely love story, says energy innovator Olivia Breese. She details the fateful marriage of a green electron and a water molecule -- a powerful source of...
Instructional Video6:21
SciShow

The Nuclear-Powered Clocks of the Future

12th - Higher Ed
Atomic clocks are the best timekeepers humanity's got these days, but scientists are working toward something even better: a SUB-atomic (aka nuclear) clock.
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

The Sun Is Green

12th - Higher Ed
The Sun is green, actually. We'll go into why the blackbody effect means the Sun emits more green visible light than any other color, and why evolution and color perception mean it's ok to see it as yellow, anyway.
Instructional Video4:29
MinutePhysics

A Better Way To Picture Atoms

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about using Bohmian trajectories to visualize the wavefunctions of hydrogen orbitals, rendered in 3D using custom python code in Blender.
Instructional Video1:43
MinutePhysics

How to Simulate the Universe on your Laptop

12th - Higher Ed
One Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in one minute!
Instructional Video3:28
SciShow

How Does a Photon Become a Film Photo?

12th - Higher Ed
The chemistry behind film photography is pretty fascinating. How do film cameras help us turn light into a physical image?
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

From Lifesaver Sparks to Life-saving Tech: The Science of Triboluminescence

12th - Higher Ed
You might know that if you chomp on a Wint-O-Green Lifesaver in a dark room, you can see little blue flashes of light in your mouth. What you might not know is that this is an example of triboluminescence: a fascinating, somewhat...
Instructional Video3:47
SciShow

Exotic Chemistry: World's Oldest Water and The Rarest Element

12th - Higher Ed
This week's SciShow news brings you discoveries involving two of the most exotic substances on Earth - the world's rarest element and the world's oldest water. Two great tastes that taste great together? Stay tuned to find out.