Instructional Video5:00
MinutePhysics

Science, Religion, and the Big Bang

12th - Higher Ed
Science, Religion, and the Big Bang
Instructional Video3:09
MinutePhysics

Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins

12th - Higher Ed
Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins
Instructional Video12:23
PBS

Are there Infinite Versions of You?

12th - Higher Ed
The cosmological equations that so beautifully describe our universe make an uncomfortable prediction: interpreting them in the most straightforward way, they tell us that the universe may be infinite. Or not; it could turn out that the...
Instructional Video11:54
PBS

What’s On The Other Side Of A Black Hole?

12th - Higher Ed
Normal maps are useless inside black holes. At the event horizon - the ultimate point of no return as you approach a black hole - time and space themselves change their character. We need new coordinate systems to trace paths into the...
Instructional Video12:25
PBS

Is The Universe Finite?

12th - Higher Ed
Every time you walk out the door, light from the Big Bang strikes your face, enters your eyes. This is the cosmic microwave background radiation - the left-over heat-glow from the very early universe. We can’t see this microwave light...
Instructional Video12:30
PBS

Did Time Start at the Big Bang?

12th - Higher Ed
Our universe started with the big bang. But only for the right definition of “our universe”. And of “started” for that matter. In fact, probably the Big Bang is nothing like what you were taught. A hundred years ago we discovered the...
Instructional Video24:14
Instructional Video11:39
PBS

Feynman's Infinite Quantum Paths

12th - Higher Ed
There is a fundamental limit to the knowability of the universe. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle tells us that the more precisely we try to define one property, the less definable is its counterpart. Knowing a particle's location...
Instructional Video12:13
PBS

The Phantom Singularity

12th - Higher Ed
Isaac Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation tells us that there is a singularity to be found within a black hole, but scientists and mathematicians have found a number of issues with Newton's equations. They don't always accurately...
Instructional Video14:24
Crash Course

The Big Bang: Crash Course Big History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green, Hank Green, and Emily Graslie teach you about, well, everything. Big History is the history of everything. We're going to start with the Big Bang, take you right through all of history (recorded and otherwise), and...
Instructional Video13:33
PBS

Topology Riddles | Infinite Series

12th - Higher Ed
Can you turn your pants inside out without taking your feet off the ground?
Instructional Video15:33
PBS

How Big are All Infinities Combined? (Cantor's Paradox)

12th - Higher Ed
Infinities come in different sizes. There's a whole tower of progressively larger "sizes of infinity". So what's the right way to describe the size of the whole tower?
Instructional Video14:28
PBS

Kill the Mathematical Hydra

12th - Higher Ed
How do you defeat a creature that grows two heads for every one head you chop off? You do the math.
Instructional Video5:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Boltzmann brain paradox | Fabio Pacucci

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How do you know you're a person who has lived your life, rather than a just-formed brain full of artificial memories, momentarily hallucinating a reality that doesn't actually exist? That may sound absurd, but it's kept several...
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is there a center of the universe? - Marjee Chmiel and Trevor Owens

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's been a long road to the discovery that Earth is not the center of the Solar System, the Milky Way, or the universe; great thinkers from Aristotle to Bruno have grappled with it for millennia. But if we aren't at the center of the...
Instructional Video3:35
MinutePhysics

Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins

12th - Higher Ed
Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins
Instructional Video5:19
MinutePhysics

Science, Religion, and the Big Bang

12th - Higher Ed
Science, Religion, and the Big Bang
Instructional Video4:53
SciShow

Is There Really An Infinite Multiverse? - Stephen Hawking's Last Paper

12th - Higher Ed
Just a few days before he died, Stephen Hawking submitted one last research paper using string theory math to talk about the multiverse.
Instructional Video9:16
PBS

The Vacuum Catastrophe

12th - Higher Ed
If vacuum energy really does have the enormous value predicted by quantum field theory then our gently expanding, geometrically flat universe shouldn't exist. This is the vacuum catastrophe.
Instructional Video17:16
TED Talks

Jim Holt: Why does the universe exist?

12th - Higher Ed
Why is there something instead of nothing? In other words: Why does the universe exist (and why are we in it)? Philosopher and writer Jim Holt follows this question toward three possible answers. Or four. Or none.
Instructional Video10:22
PBS

Singularities Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Mathematician Kelsey Houston-Edwards explains exactly what singularities are and how they exist right under our noses.
Instructional Video4:17
MinutePhysics

How Big is the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
It has NO EDGE. And NO CENTER... or does it?
Instructional Video18:18
3Blue1Brown

Hilbert's Curve: Is infinite math useful?

12th - Higher Ed
Drawing curves that fill all of space, and a philosophical take on why mathematics about infinite objects can still be useful in finite contexts.
Instructional Video12:19
PBS

Infinite Chess

12th - Higher Ed
How long will it take to win a game of chess on an infinite chessboard?