Instructional Video3:56
SciShow

How Did Earth Get Its Water?

12th - Higher Ed
If water just keeps getting recycled by a closed system on Earth, how did it get here in the first place? Where did the cycle begin?
Instructional Video3:36
MinutePhysics

Antimatter Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Antimatter Explained
Instructional Video5:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What happened to antimatter? - Rolf Landua

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Particles come in pairs, which is why there should be an equal amount of matter and antimatter in the universe. Yet, scientists have not been able to detect any in the visible universe. Where is this missing antimatter? CERN scientist...
Instructional Video3:31
SciShow

How to Date a Dead Thing

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explains radiocarbon dating, the best way to date a dead thing!
Instructional Video4:15
SciShow

How to Find Dark Matter with a Billion Pendulums | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Are you there Dark Matter? It's me, a billion pendulums.
Instructional Video10:23
SciShow

The End of Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us an inclusive overview of how everything in the universe is thought to have begun, and how cosmologists predict it will all come to an end. Now get happy!
Instructional Video4:36
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Sunlight is way older than you think - Sten Odenwald

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It takes light a zippy 8 minutes to reach Earth from the surface of the Sun. But how long does it take that same light to travel from the Sun's core to its surface? Oddly enough, the answer is many thousands of years. Sten Odenwald...
Instructional Video2:46
MinutePhysics

How to Build a Teleporter with Aliens

12th - Higher Ed
The first 200 people to use http://skl.sh/minutephysics30 get 30% off a premium Skillshare subscription. This video is about the international system of units (SI), the international prototype kilogram (the IPK or "le grande k"), and...
Instructional Video2:54
TED-Ed

TED-ED: If matter falls down, does antimatter fall up? - Chlo_ Malbrunot

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Like positive and negative, or debit and credit, matter and antimatter are equal and opposite. So if matter falls down, does antimatter fall up? Chloe Malbrunot investigates that question by placing two atoms - one made of matter, and...
Instructional Video11:50
Bozeman Science

PS1A - Structure and Properties of Matter

12th - Higher Ed
In the first physical science video for the Next Generation Science Standards Paul Andersen explains the structure and properties of matter. He starts by explaining how all matter is made of about 100 smaller particles called matter. He...
Instructional Video11:05
Crash Course

How to Identify Molecules - Proton NMR: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
If you were given a chemical and told to identify it, how would you go about doing that? You could look at different factors like color, boiling point, melting point, or smell, but the answer still might not be clear. Thankfully, today...
Instructional Video3:55
SciShow

Why Scientists Want to Build a Shoebox-Sized Particle Accelerator

12th - Higher Ed
If you want to make particles move really fast, you have to build a particle accelerator that is really big, right? Not anymore!
Instructional Video10:37
Crash Course

Thermodynamics and Energy Diagrams - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In organic chemistry, different reactions can take place at vastly different speeds. To better understand whether a reaction actually will happen, and how useful that reaction is, we need to understand thermodynamics and kinetics. In...
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow

Meet CERNs New Particle A DoubleCharm Baryon

12th - Higher Ed
This week, CERN announced a new particle that will help further understanding of the fundamental forces, and a simulation of ancient creatures may give us a clue as to how life grew beyond the microscopic.
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Are We Finally on the Road to Fusion Power?

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists working at a nuclear fusion facility in Oxford announced a record-breaking result. And while there's still a lot to figure out to make fusion viable, this brings us one step closer to realizing a technology with huge potential...
Instructional Video2:41
SciShow

Litmus Test SciShow Experiments

12th - Higher Ed
Do science at home with Hank in this episode of SciShow - you'll learn how to make your own litmus paper, what it's good for, and how it works.
Instructional Video11:35
Crash Course

Nucleophiles and Electrophiles - Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Organic reactions are kind of like carefully choreographed fight scenes, and nucleophilic attack is a key move. This episode of Crash Course Organic Chemistry is all about nucleophiles and electrophiles, or what happens at those...
Instructional Video6:03
Bozeman Science

Neutralization Reaction

12th - Higher Ed
In a neutralization reaction (or acid-base reaction) a proton is transferred from the Brinsted--Lowry acid to the Brinsted--Lowry base. Water is amphoteric and so it can serve as either an acid or a base in a neutralization reaction. The...
Instructional Video2:02
SciShow

Why Do Atoms Bond?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explains what makes atoms bond (and what makes them sometimes seem promiscuous).
Instructional Video4:17
SciShow

The Search for Antimatter

12th - Higher Ed
If you don't have any idea what antimatter is, you don't have to feel bad - the brightest minds in the world have only recently begun to understand what it is and how it works. Hank gives us the run down on what we know about antimatter,...
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

This Tank of Water Could Change Physics Forever

12th - Higher Ed
No one has ever conclusively seen a proton turn into other, lighter particles, but fifty million liters of water in Japan might change that and our ideas about subatomic particles forever.
Instructional Video9:55
Crash Course

The Nucleus: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Hank does his best to convince us that chemistry is not torture, but is instead the amazing and beautiful science of stuff. Chemistry can tell us how three tiny particles - the proton, neutron and electron - come together in trillions of...
Instructional Video5:24
SciShow

The Real Philosopher's Stone: Turning Lead into Gold

12th - Higher Ed
With scientists’ efforts and their creativity, we finally found “the real philosopher’s stone.” That's right, we can now turn lead into gold... a little bit.
Instructional Video8:46
Bozeman Science

Periodicity

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains why atoms in the periodic table show trends in ionization energy, atomic radii, electronegativity and charge. All of these trends are explained through Coulomb's Law. A brief description of Dmitri...