Instructional Video2:14
Science360

4 Awesome Discoveries You Probably Didn’t Hear About This Week - Episode 28

12th - Higher Ed
Hydrogen from industrial waste, gripping shrinkage, urban heat archipelagos, and shedding ice. Ice-proof coating for big structures...
Instructional Video5:01
Science360

PAEMST Take the first step, apply!

12th - Higher Ed
The Presidential Awards for Excellence in Mathematics and Science Teaching (PAEMST) are the nation's highest honors for teachers of mathematics and science (including computer science). NSF has prepared this video for teachers to see and...
Instructional Video1:39
Science360

How long should a tail be for a swimming organism?

12th - Higher Ed
How long should a tail be for a swimming organism? Annette Peko Hosoi, professor and associate dean of engineering at MIT, answers the question on this edition of "Ask a Scientist."
Instructional Video2:21
Science360

What do we know about how people recognize faces?

12th - Higher Ed
What do we know about how people recognize faces? Catherine Stamoulis, assistant professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, answers the question on this edition of "Ask a Scientist."
Instructional Video5:05
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - The Science of Skis

12th - Higher Ed
In skiing events like the downhill, slalom or ski jump it's often the skis that are bound to an athlete's feet--and the materials used to make them--that give these athletes an edge over the competition. U.S. Ski Team members Julia...
Instructional Video2:34
Science360

All-in-one weather and crop monitor delivers agricultural insight to farmers – CES 2018

12th - Higher Ed
NSF-funded small business Arable Labs has developed a crop and weather sensor that delivers real-time, precision weather information straight to the hands of farmers in the field. The technology packs sensors into portal devices that...
Instructional Video5:05
Science360

Load Transfer - Science of Speed

12th - Higher Ed
NASCAR corners are divided into three parts because the car's grip changes in different parts of a turn. The higher center of gravity in the new car challenges crew chiefs to minimize weight shift around a turn. Equipment like the...
Instructional Video2:38
Science360

Technology helps create bio-engineered organs for human transplant

12th - Higher Ed
More than 120,000 people are on the national organ transplant waiting list, and the list continues to grow. To meet this need, Miromatrix Medical, a small business funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), is developing a...
Instructional Video2:40
Science360

Researchers harness ultrasound technology to give amputees a better grip with their prosthetics.

12th - Higher Ed
Controlling today’s advanced prosthetic arms and hands can be very challenging. Often, today’s prosthetic systems can’t provide the type of control and functionality for day to day tasks. National Science Foundation-funded engineers at...
Instructional Video2:49
Science360

The RAT Pack - Using sound to find clogged sewer pipes

12th - Higher Ed
InfoSense, Inc., a small business that received early funding from the National Science Foundation, has developed a technology that helps keep sewer pipes clog-free. The company, which is spun out of University of North Carolina at...
Instructional Video7:32
Science360

Reproducibility The Basics - Scientists and Engineers on Sofas (and other furnishings)

12th - Higher Ed
Reproducibility. Replicability. They’re terms that keep popping up as the scientific community discusses how best to ensure that published research is robust and reliable. Brian Nosek, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia...
Instructional Video2:56
Science360

From 'Useless Math' To Powerful Security

12th - Higher Ed
William Martin at Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) has drawn on mathematical systems once thought to have no practical use to help make public key cryptography run effectively on sensors with tiny processors and meager power supplies.
Instructional Video6:40
Science360

Economist Paul Milgrom - ScienceLives

12th - Higher Ed
In 1994, when the Federal Communications Commission decided to allocate broadcast licenses via auction rather than lottery, it didn't do so in a vacuum. The rationale for the move came from the work of economists and other researchers —...
Instructional Video1:06
Science360

Monitoring CO2 Around The Globe - Earth's Heat Balance

12th - Higher Ed
How are scientists monitoring CO2 around the globe?
Instructional Video1:37
Science360

How the Event Horizon Telescope took first ever image of a black hole

12th - Higher Ed
Brief oveview of the Event Horizon telescope with a simple explanation of how the EHT works and the black hole image it captured. Includes a soundbite with the National Science Foundation director and the Event Horizon Telescope director.
Instructional Video4:57
Science360

Driving with Your Tongue? - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Steering a wheelchair with tongue movements could one day give quadriplegics a taste of independence. With funding from the National Science Foundation, Maysam Ghovanloo at Georgia Tech designs technology that allows people with...
Instructional Video3:10
Science360

Computer scientist Kinnis Gosha - ScienceLives

12th - Higher Ed
Morehouse College professor and director of the NSF-supported Culturally Relevant Computing Lab, Kinnis Gosha, dedicates his time to reshaping the demographics of the field of computer science.
Instructional Video2:34
Science360

Brain Positioning System: BPS - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
What happens in your brain when you get lost or forget something? Johns Hopkins University Neuroscientist Amy Shelton believes she can find the answer. With funding from the National Science Foundation, she's testing human spatial...
Instructional Video1:01
Science360

How Will Climate Change Affect Drought? - The Water Cycle

12th - Higher Ed
How will climate change affect drought in the western United States?
Instructional Video2:18
Science360

The incredible bladderwort

12th - Higher Ed
In episode 3, Charlie and Jordan talk road tripping on lithium-air batteries, the super-compact carnivorous plant – the bladderwort – and new ways to treat water and waste water sustainably and off the grid.
Instructional Video6:17
Science360

Scientists & artists team up to explore our brain on art. See it in NSF Science Now episode 38!

12th - Higher Ed
In this week's episode of NSF Science Now(38) we explore our brain on art, examine a buried, ancient Maya village, learn about SafePay-a new, secure method to fight against credit card fraud, and finally we discover how beavers are...
Instructional Video1:52
Science360

Where Does Atmospheric Carbon Come From? - The Carbon Cycle

12th - Higher Ed
Where does the carbon in the atmosphere come from?
Instructional Video4:30
Science360

Young citizen scientists assist in Salt Lake City air quality research - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Community, students and scientists benefit from partnership to assess particulate matter pollution Middle and high school students in Salt Lake City are helping scientists and the community better understand particulate matter...
Instructional Video6:54
Science360

Electric Vehicles - Green Revolution

12th - Higher Ed
What's so difficult about making the electric vehicle a reality? One of the toughest parts is storing enough potential energy to get you where you're going, and in this case, it's all about the battery. Graduate student Katharine...