Instructional Video26:13
SciShow

What Do Magnetic Fields Actually Do? | SciShow Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
So what exactly do magnetic fields actually do? What would happen if they went away? Turns out, it could be catastrophic! SciShow will explain it all in this fun new episode hosted by Michael Aranda!
Instructional Video3:52
SciShow

Why Scientists Want to Build a Shoebox-Sized Particle Accelerator

12th - Higher Ed
If you want to make particles move really fast, you have to build a particle accelerator that is really big, right? Not anymore! Hosted by: Hank Green
Instructional Video5:59
SciShow

Why the Weak Nuclear Force Ruins Everything

12th - Higher Ed
The weak force has been causing trouble for a century, ruining everything physicists thought was true. But it might actually be responsible for your very existence.
Instructional Video4:49
Bozeman Science

Systems and Objects

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the differences between a system and an object. Depending on the scale it often times easies to view a system as an object if the constituent parts aren't relevant to the question being asked. He also...
Instructional Video12:20
PBS

Quantum Gravity and the Hardest Problem in Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Between them, general relativity and quantum mechanics seem to describe all of observable reality.
Instructional Video6:46
Bozeman Science

Coupled Reactions

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the importance role of coupled reactions in biology. He starts by explaining how the power of a river can be harnessed by a water mill to grind grains. He describes the importance of ATP and how it is used within...
Instructional Video11:11
PBS

Are the Fundamental Constants Changing?

12th - Higher Ed
The laws of physics are the same everywhere in the universe. At least we astrophysicists hope so. After all, it's hard to unravel the complexities of distant parts of the universe if we don't know the basic rules. But what if this is...
Instructional Video11:20
PBS

Anti-Matter and Quantum Relativity

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Dirac's insights into the nature of Quantum Mechanics laid the foundation for Quantum Field Theory and predicted the existence of anti-matter. Part 1 in our series on Quantum Field Theory.
Instructional Video4:13
MinutePhysics

Will Batteries Power The World? | The Limits Of Lithium-ion

12th - Higher Ed
Can Batteries Power Everything? This video is about the physical and chemical limitations to electrolytic batteries, and how we might surpass the energy density and specific energy of lithium-ion batteries (like the Panasonic 18650...
Instructional Video12:32
Crash Course

Carbon... SO SIMPLE: Crash Course Biology

12th - Higher Ed
And thus begins the most revolutionary biology course in history. Come and learn about covalent, ionic, and hydrogen bonds. What about electron orbitals, the octet rule, and what does it all have to do with a mad man named Gilbert Lewis?...
Instructional Video9:10
PBS

The One-Electron Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Could it be that all the electrons in the universe are simply one, single electron moving back and forth through time?
Instructional Video2:34
MinutePhysics

Is the Universe Entirely Mathematical feat. Max Tegmark

12th - Higher Ed
Is the Universe Entirely Mathematical feat. Max Tegmark
Instructional Video1:53
MinutePhysics

How To Make MUONS

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how to create muons in a particle accelerator via bombardment of heavy nuclei with protons, which results in creation of charged pions (plus and minus). The pions then decay into muons and mu neutrinos, and the muons...
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 Video7:49
PBS

The Higgs Mechanism Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum Field Theory is generally accepted as an accurate description of the subatomic universe. However until recently this theory had one giant hole in it. The particles it describes had no mass!
Instructional Video5:07
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why don't we cover the desert with solar panels? | Dan Kwartler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Stretching over roughly nine million square kilometers and with sands reaching temperatures of up to 80° Celsius, the Sahara Desert receives about 22 million terawatt hours of energy from the Sun every year. That's well over 100 times...
Instructional Video5:31
MinutePhysics

Legitimate Cold Fusion Exists | Muon-Catalyzed Fusion

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the original cold fusion: μ muon-catalyzed cold fusion of deuterium, tritium, hydrogen, into helium-3 and helium 4. The problems with it are the half-life of muons and the sticking of muons to alpha particles. Also...
Instructional Video3:43
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.
Instructional Video0:56
MinutePhysics

The Wave-Particle Duality - Part 2

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode, I revisit the wave particle duality and present an intuitive analogy for understanding how it works.
Instructional Video2:27
MinutePhysics

Do Photons Cast Shadows?

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about two-photon (gamma-gamma) physics, and how photons can interact with each other - either mediated by a passing lepton, or gravitationally via lensing, or via vacuum fluctuation pair production of vertical particles...
Instructional Video3:07
SciShow

Higgs Boson Discovery! We think?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us the specifics on the "discovery" of the elusive Higgs boson. It is, at the very least, a victory for the scientific method!
Instructional Video10:00
SciShow

From Thunderstorms to Black Holes: 4 Natural Particle Accelerators

12th - Higher Ed
We've been making particle accelerators for more than a century and have accelerated particles to more than 99.9999% the speed of light. But our accelerators are nothing compared to some of the ones we've found in nature!
Instructional Video13:49
SciShow

SciShow Quiz Show: Humans, Airplanes, and Sex

12th - Higher Ed
What happens if you eat too many raw eggs? What are those little rods sticking out of airplane wings? All this, and more as Nicole Sweeney, host of Crash Course Sociology, faces off against Hank in an episode of the SciShow Quiz Show.
Instructional Video5:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What’s the smallest thing in the universe? - Jonathan Butterworth

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you were to take a coffee cup, and break it in half, then in half again, and keep carrying on, where would you end up? Could you keep on going forever? Or would you eventually find a set of indivisible building blocks out of which...