Instructional Video1:12
Next Animation Studio

Rocket Lab challenges SpaceX with big Neutron rocket

12th - Higher Ed
New Zealand’s small-rocket specialist is opening a second launch site in the US, and will start to challenge SpaceX in the construction and launching of large, reusable rockets.
Instructional Video11:17
Curated Video

Understanding Orbits: Gravity, Speed, and Distance in Space

9th - Higher Ed
This video is a lecture presentation on orbits. It discusses how an object remains in orbit and what affects the orbital speed of an object. The presenter explains the role gravity plays in keeping celestial bodies in orbit and gives...
Instructional Video16:05
Epic History TV

Apollo Program Part 1: Tragedy to Triumph

12th - Higher Ed
This video looks at the dramatic history of NASA's Apollo Program, beginning with President Kennedy's ambitious deadline for a lunar landing in response to Soviet success with Sputnik and cosmonaut Yuri Gargarin. We look at how Werner...
Instructional Video5:33
The Noted Anatomist

Cranial nerves III, IV and VI

Higher Ed
This tutorial briefly covers CN III (oculomotor nerve), CN IV (trochlear nerve) and CN VI (abducens nerve).
Instructional Video1:12
Next Animation Studio

Astroscale launches satellite that grabs and burns space junk

12th - Higher Ed
Astroscale launched the world's first test satellite that uses magnets to gather up and dispose of orbital debris.
Instructional Video12:12
Instructional Video5:52
Astrum

How do we know it rains iron on WASP-76b?

Higher Ed
There is an exoplanet, discovered by ESO's VLT, where it rains iron. But WASP-67b is 690 light years away, how could we possibly know that?
Podcast24:05
NASA

Gravity Assist: A Special Delivery of Life’s Building Blocks, with Jason Dworkin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When Earth was just a baby, meteors and asteroids rained down, delivering all sorts of chemicals to our developing planet. These small objects could have delivered the chemicals needed to spark life on Earth for the first time.
Instructional Video10:27
Astrum

The next step in Earth-like Exoplanet discovery - the blurry images of CHEOPS

Higher Ed
It seems counterintuitive, but ESA's newest space telescope, CHEOPS, is designed to take blurry images of stars. But this helps astronomers to understand more about orbiting exoplanets than a clear image would. Here's why!
Instructional Video5:14
Weatherthings

Weather Things: Carbon Dioxide

6th - 8th
Climate is the average type of weather that a region has. It is defined by temperature and moisture. Proximity to oceans and large mountain ranges defines climate too, depending upon the prevailing wind. While climates change over...
Instructional Video2:51
TMW Media

Searching for Life in the Galaxy: How to find planets outside our solar system

K - 5th
How do stars form? How do planets form? How do scientist find other planets? Searching for Life in the Galaxy, Part 3
Instructional Video5:19
Learning Mole

Saturn

Pre-K - 12th
This animated video is all about the Ringed Planet - Saturn. Students will love this engaging and interactive video.
Instructional Video8:23
Astrum

Why are all the planets on the same orbital plane?

Higher Ed
Is it a coincidence? Or is something else at play here?
Instructional Video7:45
Mazz Media

What is a Planet? (Simple English)

6th - 8th
This live-action video program is about the word planet. The program is designed to reinforce and support a student's comprehension and retention of the word planet through use of video footage, photographs, diagrams and colorful,...
Instructional Video2:13
Next Animation Studio

Pluto should still be considered a planet, according to new study

12th - Higher Ed
The International Astronomical Union should ‘rescind their non-scientific definition’ of Pluto as a dwarf planet, according to a five-year study
Instructional Video4:09
Mazz Media

Asteroid

6th - 8th
This live-action video program is about the word Asteroid. The program is designed to reinforce and support a student's comprehension and retention of the word Asteroid through use of video footage, photographs, diagrams and colorful,...
Podcast12:01
NASA

‎The Invisible Network: 06. Next-Gen | NASA's The Invisible Network Podcast

Pre-K - Higher Ed
CubeSats are small satellites, some weighing as little as 3 pounds. They provide opportunities for small-scale research in space, and an avenue for young scientists — some as young as middle school-aged — to see their curiosity take...
Instructional Video2:30
Curated Video

The Space Race: A Cold War Competition That Shaped the Future

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This video provides a historical overview of the space race between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War. It highlights how both countries competed to achieve milestones in space exploration, such as launching...
Instructional Video0:52
Next Animation Studio

Planet search: Three new planets discovered orbiting around an ultracool dwarf star

12th - Higher Ed
The search for life beyond our solar system has taken an exciting turn, after a Belgian-led team reported finding planets with the potential to host life. Fox News reports that a team of Belgian astronomers have discovered three new...
Instructional Video7:19
Odd Quartet

The Most Important Chord Progression - Music Theory Crash Course

9th - 12th
There is one chord progression that gets used in almost every style of music from classical, jazz, hip hop, pop music, and EDM. It is the V - I chord progression. Today, we are going to break this down to see why it works and how it...
Instructional Video1:06
Next Animation Studio

Giant Chinese rocket’s pieces to rain down on Earth, again

12th - Higher Ed
This wouldn't be the first time a Chinese rocket crashed out of control. In May 2020, a Chinese Long March 5B rocket slammed through the atmosphere, partially burning up during its descent. The core fell largely into the Atlantic Ocean,...
Instructional Video2:20
Visual Learning Systems

The Solar System: Ancient Astronomers, Gravity, and Planetary Motion

9th - 12th
In this video, we learn about ancient astronomers' beliefs regarding the solar system and how they believed Earth was the center with the sun and other bodies revolving around it. It also highlights the role of gravity in keeping the...
Instructional Video1:32
Next Animation Studio

‘Super-Earth’ and ‘sub-Neptune’ found orbiting red dwarf

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have found two exoplanets orbiting a red dwarf around 120 light-years from Earth, including a “super-Earth,” according to research published in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Instructional Video0:46
Next Animation Studio

Private 'Sentinel' space telescope to hunt asteroids

12th - Higher Ed
A private non-profit organization supported by scientists and former astronauts is planning to launch a space telescope that will hunt down asteroids that threaten Earth. The B-612 Foundation said its Sentinel telescope would locate and...