Instructional Video6:56
3Blue1Brown

Tattoos on Math

12th - Higher Ed
After a friend of mine got a tattoo with a representation of the cosecant function, it got me thinking about how there's another sense in which this function is a tattoo on math, so to speak.
Instructional Video3:39
SciShow Kids

Explore Saturn's Rings

K - 5th
There's a lot more to Saturn's rings than just looking awesome! Find out why!
Instructional Video7:20
Crash Course

Humans and Energy: Crash Course World History 207

12th - Higher Ed
In which Stan Muller subs for John Green and teaches you about energy and humanity. Today we discuss the ideas put forth by Alfred Crosby in his book, Children of the Sun. Historically, almost all of the energy that humans use has been...
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Sensor That Dissolves in Your Brain

12th - Higher Ed
In this week's SciShow News, we discuss two new types of sensors being developed. One tracks the content of certain molecules in your sweat while you exercise and the other is a brain implant that can be resorbed once it has finished its...
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

A Potential New Staph Vaccine and Touchable "Holograms"

12th - Higher Ed
What's cooler: A vaccine for one of the deadliest bacterial infections around or a holodeck? Well, this week we got a step closer to BOTH!
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

This Might Be a Brand-New Kind of Star | Space News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have theorized about an invisible star made up of theoretic particles in the past, but did we recently detect the gravitational waves of two of them colliding? Plus, extraterrestrial rocks from a decades-old mission keep...
Instructional Video14:38
TED Talks

TED: A one-man world summit | Rory Bremner

12th - Higher Ed
Scottish funnyman Rory Bremner convenes a historic council on the TEDGlobal stage -- as he lampoons Gordon Brown, Barack Obama, George W. Bush and a cast of other world leaders with his hilarious impressions and biting commentary. See if...
Instructional Video1:42
SciShow

What Causes Growing Pains?

12th - Higher Ed
Growing Pains are real, but no one seems to know why exactly kids get them. Learn what we do know here on SciShow Quick Question!
Instructional Video6:21
SciShow

Why Is It So Hard to Build an ICBM?

12th - Higher Ed
To hopefully put your mind more at ease, Hank is here to talk about the work that goes into designing and building ICBMs.
Instructional Video2:27
SciShow

These Birds Smell Like Tangerines

12th - Higher Ed
On remote, rocky North Pacific islands, you may find a cute little bird that just so happens to smell like tangerines.
Instructional Video5:12
SciShow

How Tattoos Really Work... At Least in Mice

12th - Higher Ed
People have been getting tattoos for thousands of years, but we've never quite been sure why the ink sticks around under our skin. A group of researchers now think they might have the answer. Plus, scientists are on the road to making...
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

From Scarred Lungs to Diabetes: How COVID May Stick With People Long-Term | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Even though we are still in the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, scientists are trying to figure out the ways in which this disease may stick with people in the long term - from lasting lung damage to potentially triggering...
Instructional Video1:24
SciShow

Why Does Alcohol Burn When You Drink It?

12th - Higher Ed
Why does alcohol cause that burning sensation on its way down?
Instructional Video20:20
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: The History of Gender & Kiki the Domestic Cat

12th - Higher Ed
This week on the show Dr. Lindsey Doe, host of Sexplanations, walks us through a history of cases that have altered our understanding of gender identity. Then Jessi from Animal Wonders joins the show with Kiki, a domestic cat.
Instructional Video10:38
SciShow

How Knots Help Us Understand the World

12th - Higher Ed
Knots are everywhere in our daily lives, but a new branch of mathematics is taking things to the next level.
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

Making Antivenom out of Human Antibodies | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists are looking for a new way to make antivenom and a new study poked some holes in a diagnostic test by making volunteers drink their own blood.
Instructional Video9:04
Crash Course

Where Are My Children: Crash Course Film Criticism

12th - Higher Ed
Before the Hayes Code was enacted, movies were a lot more brazen than we sometimes tend to think. Director/Producer Lois Weber spent much of her career making movies that challenged audiences. Her film, "Where Are My Children" is no...
Instructional Video8:43
TED Talks

Jessica Green: We're covered in germs. Let's design for that.

12th - Higher Ed
Our bodies and homes are covered in microbes -- some good for us, some bad for us. As we learn more about the germs and microbes who share our living spaces, TED Fellow Jessica Green asks: Can we design buildings that encourage happy,...
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

Are Self-Driving Cars Safe?

12th - Higher Ed
Tesla's Autopilot system is the most advanced available right now, but it has limitations, and some of those limitations might be us.
Instructional Video5:33
SciShow

These Smart Roads Could Change the Future of Driving

12th - Higher Ed
From self-healing asphalt to electrified roads, technology is steering the future of driving along some exciting new paths!
Instructional Video6:22
SciShow

How Bacteria Helped Plants Take Over the World | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
This week, scientists think they may have found a missing link in regards to how plants went from living in the sea to on land, and also, in adorable news, surfing honeybees.
Instructional Video4:15
SciShow

The Next Step to a Holodeck

12th - Higher Ed
The next step toward a holodeck might be the ability to actually touch a simulation, and we’re getting closer—using sound.
Instructional Video5:43
SciShow

We Don't All Have a "Mind's Eye" | Aphantasia

12th - Higher Ed
Some people don’t have or use visual imagination, or the “mind’s eye.” Many with this condition, called aphantasia, might not even realize that they’re experiencing the world differently, but this difference offers a new window into how...
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

Why You’ll Never See Your Eyes Move in a Mirror

12th - Higher Ed
Your brain does a lot to smooth out your visual experience of the world… including the closest thing we have to time travel.