Instructional Video5:11
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can steroids save your life? | Anees Bahji

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Steroids: they're infamous for their use in sports. But they're also found in inhalers, creams to treat poison ivy and eczema, and shots to ease inflammation. The steroids in these medicines aren't the same as those used to build muscle....
Instructional Video9:54
Crash Course

Polar & Non-Polar Molecules: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Molecules come in infinite varieties, so in order to help the complicated chemical world make a little more sense, we classify and categorize them. One of the most important of those classifications is whether a molecule is polar or...
Instructional Video3:20
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Activation energy: Kickstarting chemical reactions - Vance Kite

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Chemical reactions are constantly happening in your body -- even at this very moment. But what catalyzes these important reactions? Vance Kite explains how enzymes assist the process, while providing a light-hearted way to remember how...
Instructional Video3:50
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How polarity makes water behave strangely - Christina Kleinberg

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Water is both essential and unique. Many of its particular qualities stem from the fact that it consists of two hydrogen atoms and one oxygen, therefore creating an unequal sharing of electrons. From fish in frozen lakes to ice floating...
Instructional Video9:49
TED Talks

TED: The brain science of obesity | Mads Tang-Christensen

12th - Higher Ed
Your belly and your brain speak to each other, says obesity researcher Mads Tang-Christensen. Offering scientific proof that obesity is a disease influenced by genetics and the environment, he introduces a molecule discovered in both the...
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

The Mystery of the Biggest Genomes

12th - Higher Ed
3 billion base pairs is a pretty typical genome size for organisms like us, but there are a few plants and animals with genomes so huge they completely blow this number out of the water.
Instructional Video11:04
Bozeman Science

Cell Membranes

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how cells are selectively permeable with the help of their cell membrane. The main constituents of the cell membrane, including cholesterol, glycolipids, glycoproteins, phospholipids, and proteins are included. The...
Instructional Video11:15
Crash Course

Carboxylic Acids: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
What do the smells of feet, armpits, vomit, and goats all have in common? (Besides being super gross…) Carboxylic acids! Despite being responsible for some of our least favorite odors, carboxylic acids are also super useful in organic...
Instructional Video7:24
SciShow

The 5 Most Important Molecules in Your Body

12th - Higher Ed
Your body has all sorts of complicated processes going on, and a lot of them are carried out by incredibly powerful molecules. We're not talking nutrients -- we're talking about 5 of the molecules that keep you ticking!
Instructional Video4:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is fat? - George Zaidan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As the narrative goes, fat is bad. Well, it's actually more nuanced than that. The type of fat you eat is more impactful on your health than the quantity. George Zaidan examines triglycerides, the varied molecules that make up fat, and...
Instructional Video6:29
SciShow

Hydrogen: The Savior of the Shipping Industry

12th - Higher Ed
Huge container ships relying on fossil fuels transport all kinds of goods across the ocean, creating a huge climate change impact. But there's a better way to power this transport using, of all things, water.
Instructional Video7:31
Bozeman Science

Dipole Forces

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen describes the intermolecular forces associated with dipoles. A dipole is a molecule that has split charge. Dipole may form associations with other dipoles, induced dipoles or ions. An important type of...
Instructional Video7:33
Crash Course

Hydrocarbon Derivatives - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Functional groups? Functional groups within functional groups? Hank takes today's Crash Course video to discuss some confusing ideas about Hydrocarbon Derivatives, but then makes it all make more sense. -- Table of Contents Alcohols...
Instructional Video12:07
Crash Course

Stoichiometry: Chemistry for Massive Creatures - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Chemists need stoichiometry to make the scale of chemistry more understandable - Hank is here to explain why, and to teach us how to use it. Table of Contents Atomic Mass Units 2:24 Moles 5:12 Molar Mass 5:59 Equation Balancing 8:45...
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

The Strange, Frictionless World of Superfluids

12th - Higher Ed
Imagine a cup of tea that doesn't obey the laws of physics, it pours out of the bottom of your cup while crawling up the sides to the top, and you'll have a pretty good picture of the ultracold phenomena of superfluids.
Instructional Video2:15
MinuteEarth

The Most Common Allergy In The World

12th - Higher Ed
The urushiol molecules in poison ivy have the ability to trigger a harmful immune response in most people because the immune system mistakenly labels them as a threat.
Instructional Video1:55
MinuteEarth

Our Atmosphere is Escaping!

12th - Higher Ed
Our Atmosphere is Escaping
Instructional Video4:32
Crash Course Kids

Organizing Properties

3rd - 8th
Have you ever thought about all the different kinds of groups you’re a part of? Like, there’s the friends you hang out with and your family, your hockey team, your Crash Course fan club, and that’s just for starters! And even though...
Instructional Video12:53
Crash Course

Polymer Chemistry: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
So far in this series we’ve focused on molecules with tens of atoms in them, but in organic chemistry molecules can get way bigger! Polymers are molecules that contain hundreds, thousands, or even millions of identical subunits. In this...
Instructional Video6:12
Bozeman Science

Elementary Reactions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains that elementary reactions are steps within a larger reaction mechanism. Colliding molecules require sufficient energy and proper orientation to break bonds and form new bonds. A unimolecular...
Instructional Video9:06
Crash Course

Aromatics and Cyclic Compounds - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
What's that smell? Smell's like Organic Chemistry! This week Hank talks about Aromatics and Cyclic Compounds and naming their substituents, resonance as well as common reactions & uses. -- Table of Contents Cyclic Organic Compounds &...
Instructional Video5:52
Bozeman Science

Kinetic Theory and Temperature

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the macroscopic measure of temperature can be related to the average kinetic energy of molecules in motion. The Boltzmann constant and distribution can be used to calculate the root mean square...
Instructional Video4:05
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The simple story of photosynthesis and food - Amanda Ooten

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Photosynthesis is an essential part of the exchange between humans and plants. Amanda Ooten walks us through the process of photosynthesis, also discussing the relationship between photosynthesis and carbohydrates, starch, and fiber --...
Instructional Video3:49
SciShow Kids

How Do Hot Air Balloons Work?

K - 5th
Hot Air Balloons! They're those big, beautiful balloons people can float up to the sky in-- but how do they get up there?!