Instructional Video6:09
SciShow

What Color Was the Big Bang?

12th - Higher Ed
If you could survive a trip to the very first moments of reality as we know it, what color would you see?
Instructional Video9:47
SciShow

Why These 5 Rocks Actually Glow

12th - Higher Ed
If you're lucky enough to find a glowing rock, it likely doesn't mean you're the chosen one. In fact, it could have to do with one of these five phenomena! Learn about the quantum mechanics of glowing rocks in this new SciShow Episode...
Instructional Video3:04
SciShow

So Apparently Platypuses Glow in the Dark

12th - Higher Ed
Of all the weird animals that exist in the world, platypuses are up there with the weirdest, and last year scientists discovered something even more peculiar about their fur: it glows! What may be even more strange, though, is how little...
Instructional Video10:40
TED Talks

TED: A new social contract for global climate justice | Huma Yusuf

12th - Higher Ed
Pakistan contributes less than one percent to the global greenhouse gas emissions perpetrating climate change, yet one-third of the country was recently inundated with "biblical" floods that killed hundreds and displaced millions. If...
Instructional Video5:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How quantum mechanics explains global warming - Lieven Scheire

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You've probably heard that carbon dioxide is warming the Earth. But how exactly is it doing it? Lieven Scheire uses a rainbow, a light bulb and a bit of quantum physics to describe the science behind global warming.
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

3 Great Minds We Lost in 2018

12th - Higher Ed
We welcomed new science and discoveries in 2018, but unfortunately, we also had to say goodbye to some important figures in the scientific community.
Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

The Biggest Water Reservoir in Space

12th - Higher Ed
In the late 2000s, scientists looking deep into space discovered the largest known water reservoir in the universe inside a quasar, orbiting a supermassive black hole. Learn more about quasars and what this water can tell us about the...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

What’s Hiding Inside The Crab Nebula?

12th - Higher Ed
The Crab Nebula is one of the most studied things in the sky, but it took glimpses through various wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum to get a full picture of what’s hiding inside!
Instructional Video6:27
SciShow

One Way to Deal With CO2? Reuse It

12th - Higher Ed
Is there any better way to create new energy than to make it out of consumed energy sources?
Instructional Video2:46
MinutePhysics

How to Build a Teleporter with Aliens

12th - Higher Ed
The first 200 people to use http://skl.sh/minutephysics30 get 30% off a premium Skillshare subscription. This video is about the international system of units (SI), the international prototype kilogram (the IPK or "le grande k"), and...
Instructional Video4:52
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Particles and waves: The central mystery of quantum mechanics - Chad Orzel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
One of the most amazing facts in physics is that everything in the universe, from light to electrons to atoms, behaves like both a particle and a wave at the same time. But how did physicists arrive at this mind-boggling conclusion? Chad...
Instructional Video9:47
SciShow

How 5 Rocks Get Their Glow

12th - Higher Ed
If you find a glowing rock, it probably doesn't mean you're the chosen one. If it's one of these five phenomena, it's quantum mechanics, not narrative significance. Chapters View all FLUORESCENCE 0:36 PHOSPHORESCENCE 2:42...
Instructional Video3:07
SciShow

So Apparently Platypuses Glow in the Dark

12th - Higher Ed
Of all the weird animals that exist in the world, platypuses are up there with the weirdest, and last year scientists discovered something even more peculiar about their fur: it glows! What may be even more strange, though, is how little...
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

The Night Sky in Infrared

12th - Higher Ed
James Webb wouldn’t be equipped to look in the infrared if not for the previous missions that have allowed us to see the universe in wavelengths that the human eye can’t see!
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

We May Have Just Found the Universe's Missing Baryonic Matter

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have finally found evidence to help solve the missing baryon problem, and they're pointing telescopes toward the Intergalactic Medium to figure it out.
Instructional Video2:25
SciShow

How Do Blacklights Make Things Glow?

12th - Higher Ed
Join Hank Green as he explains why blacklights make some things glow!
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

How To X-Ray A Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are everywhere, including at the center of our galaxy. But because they’re invisible they’re quite difficult to study. Looking at the disks of material surrounding them, however, can give us tons of clues about how they...
Instructional Video2:51
Be Smart

What Color is the Universe?

12th - Higher Ed
When you stare up at the night sky, you might think that the universe is really black, but that's just because our eyes aren't sensitive enough to see the billions and billions of multicolored stars out there. Ever wonder why certain...
Instructional Video2:38
SciShow

These Horrifying Sea Slugs Smell Like Watermelon Candies

12th - Higher Ed
These fun looking sea slugs have a few unique features, not the least of which is the fact that they defend themselves by smelling like watermelon candies.
Instructional Video1:41
MinutePhysics

How lasers work (in theory)

12th - Higher Ed
How does a laser really work? It's Bose - Einstein statistics! (photons are bosons)
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

Why Scientists Are Cooking Ancient Pots

12th - Higher Ed
Unlocking the mysteries of ancient ceramics is a bit complicated. Radiometric dating tells us the age of the clay, but when was it first shaped by a human? We can find out by blasting it with heat again!
Instructional Video4:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is light a particle or a wave? - Colm Kelleher

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Can we accurately describe light as exclusively a wave or just a particle? Are the two mutually exclusive? In this third part of his series on light and color, Colm Kelleher discusses wave-particle duality and its relationship to how we...
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

What’s a Particle Accelerator Doing in a Hospital?

12th - Higher Ed
Hospitals have all sorts of amazing tools, and some might even have a particle accelerator hiding somewhere in the basement.
Instructional Video10:30
Crash Course

Stars

12th - Higher Ed
Today Phil’s explaining the stars and how they can be categorized using their spectra. Together with their distance, this provides a wealth of information about them including their luminosity, size, and temperature. The HR diagram plots...