Instructional Video5:31
SciShow

Pyrotherapy: An Awful Nobel Prize for Infecting People with Malaria

12th - Higher Ed
Malaria vs. Neurosyphilis: the story of an unethical experiment, and its mysterious conclusions
Instructional Video4:31
SciShow

Glenn Seaborg: Shaking Up the Periodic Table

12th - Higher Ed
Hank synopsizes the life and work of Glenn Seaborg, pioneer of synthetic elements, member of the Manhattan Project, and the architect of the last great shake-up of the periodic table.
Instructional Video7:36
SciShow

The Woman Who Saved the World

12th - Higher Ed
On her way to winning the 2023 Nobel Prize for her pioneering work on mRNA vaccines, Katalin Karikó lived a life made for the big screen.
Instructional Video14:56
SciShow

A Big Bang Beginner’s Guide | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
While there's still a lot that astrophysicists don't know about the Big Bang, there are some things we do know. So today, let's get caught up on the Big Bang basics.
Instructional Video12:51
PBS

How The Penrose Singularity Theorem Predicts The End of Space Time

12th - Higher Ed
The Nobel prize in physics this year went to black holes. Generally speaking. Specifically, it was shared by the astronomers who revealed to us the Milky Way’s central black hole and by Roger Penrose, who proved that in general...
Instructional Video14:40
Curated Video

Why Did Quantum Entanglement Win the Nobel Prize in Physics?

12th - Higher Ed
The Nobel prize in physics is typically awarded to scientists who make sense of nature; those whose discoveries render the universe more comprehensible. But the 2022 Nobel has been awarded to three physicists who revealed that the...
Instructional Video7:42
SciShow

The Giant of Nanoscience

12th - Higher Ed
Mildred Dresselhaus was a giant in the field of nanoscience. She didn't invent anything you have in your home right now, but she made it possible for us to have self-charging phones, smarter refrigerators, and more.
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

The 8 Smartest People of the Year: 2013's Nobel Winners

12th - Higher Ed
Hank profiles this year's Nobel laureates in science, whose achievements have helped us understand questions as small as how our cells transport materials, and as big as why matter exists at all.
Instructional Video4:01
SciShow

Microscope: The Tube That Changed the World

12th - Higher Ed
Humans have long known that glass bends light. However, it took us awhile to figure out that stacking lenses in a tube would open up a whole new world to science, finally allowing us a peek at the microscopic.
Instructional Video6:09
SciShow

What Really Happened the First Time We Split a Heavy Atom in Half

12th - Higher Ed
When scientists first split the atom, they didn’t realize what they’d done until physicist Lise Meitner figured out they had discovered what we now call nuclear fission.
Instructional Video9:55
SciShow

6 Stupid and Dangerous Things Scientists Did to Themselves

12th - Higher Ed
From poking their own eyes, to drinking a patient's vomit, some extremely passionate scientists have done pretty outrageous things to themselves in the name of science.
Instructional Video12:14
SciShow

The Most Brilliant Scientists (Who No One Believed)

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know that the scientist who invented germ theory was disbelieved for over a decade? There are many brilliant scientists who's genius wasn't believed until many years later. Join Hank Green for a new episode of SciShow and learn...
Instructional Video20:05
SciShow

5 Scientists Too Smart for Their Time

12th - Higher Ed
You often hear of brilliant scientific discoveries that took decades to become recognized, often by scientists too smart for their time! Join Hank and look back on a few of our episodes about scientists who deserve a little more...
Instructional Video10:05
SciShow

How Machines the Size of Molecules Could Change the World

12th - Higher Ed
Future advances in engineering may come from chemistry. From molecular motors to salt-shaker-drug-deliverers, the future looks small.
Instructional Video11:04
SciShow

5 Scientists Who Experimented On Themselves: High Stakes Research

12th - Higher Ed
It took some time for us to realize it isn’t the best idea for scientists to experiment on themselves. But along the way, sometimes at the expense of the health of scientists, we have gained crucial insights into their areas of study.
Instructional Video12:39
Crash Course

The Diels-Alder & Other Pericyclic Reactions: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Going out in the sun can work wonders for your mood, but unfortunately too much UV exposure can do serious damage to your DNA. This damage occurs through a type of organic reaction called a pericyclic reaction. In this episode of Crash...
Instructional Video4:50
TED-Ed

The artist who won a Nobel Prize... in medicine | Melanie E. Peffer

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the 1860s, scientists believed they were on the verge of uncovering the brain's biggest secret: how the brain's signals travel through the body. They believed these impulses travelled uninterrupted along a massive web of tissue. But...
Instructional Video3:49
SciShow

Nobel News Capturing Photons Cloning Frogs

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us the news about the new Nobel Prize winners in the sciences, what they won for and what it all means.
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

The 2017 Nobel Prizes: Biological Clocks and Microscopy

12th - Higher Ed
Last week, the recipients of the 2017 Nobel Prizes were announced. We take a closer look at the winners of the Physiology and Chemistry Awards, whose breakthroughs change the way we study sleep, and allow us to look at microscopic...
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

Hilde Mangold and the Organizer of Life | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Experiments conducted by Hilde Mangold and Hans Spemann taught us how an animal develops from a small ball of cells into an organism with distinct, functioning parts. The work was a foundational contribution to the field of developmental...
Instructional Video12:24
SciShow

5 Scientists with Ideas That Nobody Believed ... Who Were Right

12th - Higher Ed
People have struggled to understand some hypotheses scientists had, which are correct but were disclaimed back then. So here’s the 5 scientists and their ideas that nobody believed. Chapters 0:00 0:07 0:15 0:23 0:30 0:38
Instructional Video9:55
SciShow

6 Stupid and Dangerous Things Scientists Did to Themselves

12th - Higher Ed
From poking their own eyes, to drinking a patient's vomit, some extremely passionate scientists have done pretty outrageous things to themselves in the name of science.
Instructional Video9:04
SciShow

The Worst Nobel Prize Ever Awarded

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explores the grim story of the lobotomy, the medical procedure that earned its inventor perhaps the most regrettable Nobel Prize in history.
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

Hiding a Nobel Prize From the Nazis

12th - Higher Ed
To keep their solid gold Nobel Prizes away from the Nazis, James Franck and Max von Laue sent their medals to trusted colleague Niels Bohr. But when Germany invaded Denmark in 1940, the medals were no longer safe - so chemist George de...