Instructional Video1:41
MinutePhysics

Premio Nobel 2011: La Energía Oscura feat. QuantumFracture

12th - Higher Ed
Hoy hablamos sobre la energía oscura y la aceleración del universo, el descubrimiento que fue galardonado con el Premio Nobel de 2011, el 4 de Octubre. MinutoDeFísica proporciona una visión energética y entretenida para los viejos y...
Instructional Video1:04
MinutePhysics

Demostración sin Palabras: el Círculo

12th - Higher Ed
¡Demostramos el área del círculo, πR², usando sólo cadena y una regla! ¿Y cómo sabemos cuál es el valor de π? Quantum Fracture te lo cuenta en uno de sus últimos vídeos----------------------- Video Anterior: Proof Without Words: The...
Instructional Video2:03
MinutePhysics

¿Qué tamaño tiene el Sol?

12th - Higher Ed
La Tierra es tan grande que a nosotros nos parece plana. Pero claro, todo es relativo. ¡Muchas gracias a Marcelo Enrique Anguita Fuentes por apoyarnos en Patreon! Ayudas a que MinutoDeFísica sea posible. ----------------------- Video...
Instructional Video3:59
MinutePhysics

¿Están Sesgadas las Admisiones a la Universidad? | La Paradoja de Simpson Parte 2

12th - Higher Ed
Este vídeo es sobre cómo saber si las admisiones universitarias están sesgadas usando estadística: o sea, ¡es sobre la Paradoja de Simpson otra vez! MUCHÍIIIIIISIMAS GRACIAS a las chicas de Star Tres por prestar su voz en este vídeo....
Instructional Video2:10
MinutePhysics

Teletransportes y Teleportación Cuántica

12th - Higher Ed
Una respuesta al vídeo de CGP Grey sobre teletransporte, consciencia y Star Trek. El vídeo original de CGP Grey: ¡Muchas gracias a las siguientes personas que nos apoyan en Patreon! Ayudáis a que MinutoDeFísica sea posible. Marcelo...
Instructional Video11:09
Crash Course

Supervised Machine Learning - Crash Course Statistics

12th - Higher Ed
We've talked a lot about modeling data and making inferences about it, but today we're going to look towards the future at how machine learning is being used to build models to predict future outcomes. We'll discuss three popular types...
Instructional Video1:34
MinutePhysics

¡Los Lanzamientos Más Fuertes!

12th - Higher Ed
¿Cuál es el evento de lanzamiento de peso más intenso de las Olimpiadas? ¿El de jabalina? ¿Disco? ¿Martillo? ¿Bala? ¡Muchas gracias a las siguientes personas que nos apoyan en Patreon! Ayudáis a que MinutoDeFísica sea posible. Sebastian...
Instructional Video10:18
Curated Video

Mathematical Thinking - Crash Course Statistics

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re going to talk about numeracy - that is understanding numbers. From really really big numbers to really small numbers, it's difficult to comprehend information at this scale, but these are often the types of numbers we see...
Instructional Video10:14
Crash Course

Unsupervised Machine Learning - Crash Course Statistics

12th - Higher Ed
Today we're going to discuss how machine learning can be used to group and label information even if those labels don't exist. We'll explore two types of clustering used in Unsupervised Machine Learning: k-means and Hierarchical...
Instructional Video13:30
MinutePhysics

Spacetime Diagrams | Special Relativity Ch. 2

12th - Higher Ed
This video is chapter 2 in my series on special relativity, and it covers spacetime diagrams, rotational and translational symmetry of both time and space, how certain transformations preserve distances (measured in terms of a reference...
Instructional Video7:28
TED Talks

TED: Could we treat spinal cord injuries with asparagus? | Andrew Pelling

12th - Higher Ed
Take a mind-blowing trip to the lab as TED Senior Fellow Andrew Pelling shares his research on how we could use fruits, vegetables and plants to regenerate damaged human tissues -- and develop a potentially groundbreaking way to repair...
Instructional Video9:42
SciShow

Why Do Neutrinos Have Mass? A Small Question with Huge Consequences

12th - Higher Ed
Neutrinos are weird. But all the big unsolved problems in physics are somehow connected to one unsolved mystery: Why do neutrinos have mass?
Instructional Video3:39
MinutePhysics

How To Stop Structures from SHAKING: LEGO Saturn V Tuned Mass Damper

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about Tuned Mass Dampers, which can be used to reduce or avoid unwanted vibrations, swaying, swinging, bending, etc on engineered structures ranging from buildings, skyscrapers, electricity power transmission lines,...
Instructional Video3:22
MinutePhysics

The Physics of Caramel: How To Make a Caramelized Sugar Cube

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how the physics and chemistry of sugar (in particular, how it melts, and how it caramelizes) is more complicated than you might think. It involves fructose, sucrose, glucose, and a sticky mess. Credits: Gallium...
Instructional Video2:42
MinutePhysics

Black Holes, Neutron Stars, and White Dwarfs (Collab. w/ MinuteEarth)

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the differences between the corpses or final degenerate dense star forms that dead stars take: black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs. The main distinguishing features between them are the mass cutoffs...
Instructional Video3:39
SciShow

3 Big Discoveries Made by the International Space Station

12th - Higher Ed
We all know it's awesome, and we could watch Chris Hadfield sing all day, but do you know about the awesome science that's being done on the International Space Station? Hank explains three big discoveries made on the ISS that you should...
Instructional Video3:03
MinutePhysics

Why Some Days Aren’t 24 Hours

12th - Higher Ed
Check out the "What is a Day?" interactive video at https://labs.minutelabs.io/what-is-a-day/ It's super cool!! (and made by Jasper Palfree & the MinuteEarth/MinutePhysics team) This video is about the length of a solar day vs a stellar...
Instructional Video8:55
PBS

Why the Big Bang Definitely Happened

12th - Higher Ed
We pretty much know for sure that the universe was once extremely small, and extremely hot. And we know that something set it in motion, expanding rapidly and continuing to do-so today. But the actual moment of 'the Big Bang' is still a...
Instructional Video8:04
Be Smart

Can You Bend Light Like This?

12th - Higher Ed
The other day I got bored and noticed this weird thing happened when I held my finger up to my eye, so I had to science it and figure it out! Let me know if you try these light-bending experiments too, especially that last one that I...
Instructional Video16:35
SciShow

Animal Clothes & Exploding Toads | SciShow Quiz Show

12th - Higher Ed
Two authors battle it out on SciShow to see who knows the most about animal clothes and mysterious circumstances.
Instructional Video12:48
Crash Course

Degrees of Freedom and Effect Sizes - Crash Course Statistics

12th - Higher Ed
Today we're going to talk about degrees of freedom - which are the number of independent pieces of information that make up our models. More degrees of freedom typically mean more concrete results. But something that is statistically...
Instructional Video11:35
Crash Course

Nucleophiles and Electrophiles - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Organic reactions are kind of like carefully choreographed fight scenes, and nucleophilic attack is a key move. This episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry is all about nucleophiles and electrophiles, or what happens at those...
Instructional Video8:29
SciShow

6 Organisms That Cheat the System

12th - Higher Ed
Humans are not the only animal that use cheats to make things easier. Some of the animals and plants have weird but very clever cheating skills to survive in their environment, too.
Instructional Video11:27
Crash Course

Alkyne Reactions Tautomerization - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Carbon-carbon double bonds are pretty common in nature, but triple bonds between carbons, called alkynes, are not. When alkynes do pop up in nature, it’s usually in a compound that’s toxic to humans, however, we can synthesize alkynes...