Instructional Video2:30
MinutePhysics

How Do Airplanes Fly?

12th - Higher Ed
How Do Airplanes Fly?
Instructional Video5:10
MinutePhysics

Einstein and The Special Theory of Relativity

12th - Higher Ed
How Einstein (& others) discovered Special Relativity. Pi day (3.14) is Albert Einstein's Birthday! To celebrate, we'll explain 4 of his most groundbreaking papers from 1905, when he was just 26 years old.
Instructional Video2:19
MinutePhysics

Common Physics Misconceptions

12th - Higher Ed
What if you thought the earth was flat? And then you found out it isn't?
Instructional Video6:52
TED Talks

An Astrophysicist on a Mission to Uncover the Secrets of Space

12th - Higher Ed
In the past decade, astronomers have discovered interstellar objects, including a 2014 meteor that collided with Earth and 'Oumuamua in 2017. These objects, moving too fast to be bound by the Sun's gravity, have sparked questions about...
Instructional Video12:51
SciShow

The Surprisingly Useful Physics of Desk Toys

12th - Higher Ed
How do Newton's Cradles connect to cancer treatments? Let's unpack the physics of some of our favorite desk toys, from dippy birds to perpetual motion machines, and explore how these scientific principles can be used beyond an office desk.
Instructional Video5:50
SciShow

Why NASA Put The Moon In A Pool

12th - Higher Ed
NASA has been using swimming pools to train astronauts since the 1960s. The largest is the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL), which holds roughly 9 olympic pools worth of water and has contained not just mockups of space station and...
Instructional Video2:54
MinutePhysics

How Do We Know The Universe Is Accelerating?

12th - Higher Ed
The universe is expanding – this we know from looking at red shifts of distant galaxies – but the acceleration of the universe's expansion is harder to measure. It requires measuring the change of recession velocity over time, and it's...
Instructional Video6:31
SciShow

Why Do We Rhyme?

12th - Higher Ed
Rhymes might seem frivolous, but there's scientific evidence for why we like them so much.
Instructional Video11:19
SciShow

Mercury Shouldn't Be Liquid. But It Is.

12th - Higher Ed
Mercury, a.k.a. quicksilver, is famous for being a liquid at room temperature...and also below room temperature. But you can't use a high school chem class to explain why. Instead, we need a little help from Einstein.
Instructional Video5:51
TED Talks

TED: Photographing nature beyond the limits of human perception | Doris Mitsch

12th - Higher Ed
Artist Doris Mitsch invites us to revel in the wonders of nature through her dazzling photography: stacked images of starlings in flight, hawks surfing thermal updrafts, bats echolocating through the night sky and more. Revealing the...
Instructional Video13:20
TED Talks

TED: A playbook on financing climate solutions | Nili Gilbert and David Blood

12th - Higher Ed
Tackling climate change costs a lot of money — and the financial sector is key to getting that money flowing. In a wide-ranging conversation, sustainable investment leaders Nili Gilbert and David Blood discuss where progress is being...
Instructional Video6:00
SciShow Kids

Meet the Mars Rovers! | Let's Explore Mars! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks and Jessi explore how scientists can learn things about Mars by sending rovers to land on it. They can drive around, do science, and help us learn about the Red Planet!
Instructional Video7:01
SciShow Kids

How Do Lakes Form? | Goodbye, Mister Brown! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Mister Brown is moving away to Wisconsin, so Jessi, Squeaks and all of his Fort friends are here to say goodbye. But before he goes, Mister Brown want to teach everyone about the place he's moving to and all the amazing glacial lakes...
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

How to Move the Sky

12th - Higher Ed
The earth is always moving, and our view of the night sky is slowly but surely changing.
Instructional Video6:21
SciShow

We Don’t Know Why Astronauts Get Motion Sick

12th - Higher Ed
A majority of modern astronauts experience any one of a suite of symptoms scientists collectively call Space Motion Sickness, or SMS. But despite knowing about it for nearly as long as humans have gone into space, we still don't know...
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

The Only Moons That Trade Places

12th - Higher Ed
Saturn's moons Janus and Epimetheus were once thought to be the same moon. It turns out they're dance partners.<br/>
Instructional Video12:44
PBS

How Does Gravity Warp the Flow of Time?

12th - Higher Ed
There’s a deep connection between gravity and time - gravitational fields seem to slow the pace of time in what we call gravitational time dilation. And today we’ll explore the origin of this effect. And ultimately, we’ll use what we...
Instructional Video15:57
PBS

How Far Beyond Earth Could Humanity Spread?

12th - Higher Ed
We humans have always been explorers. The great civilizations that have arisen across the world are owed to our restless ancestors. These days, there’s not much of Earth left to explore. But if we look up, there’s a whole universe out...
Instructional Video11:10
PBS

The Real Science of the EHT Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
So, how do you take a picture of a black hole? The beast in question is the supermassive black hole in the center of this – the M87 elliptical galaxy. It has an estimated mass of several billion times that of the Sun, which gives it an...
Instructional Video12:05
PBS

First Detection of Light from Behind a Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
How do you see the unseeable - how do you explore the inescapable? Our cleverest astronomers have figured out ways to catch light that skims the very edge of black holes. Let’s find out what they learned.
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A few weeks ago a...
Instructional Video8:37
PBS

Planet X Discovered?? + Challenge Winners!

12th - Higher Ed
Some funky orbits near the Kuiper Belt are hinting towards a brand new planet, the elusive ‘Planet X.’ Our friends Mike Brown and Konstantin Batygin of Caltech are working hard to finally spot the potential gas giant through powerful...
Instructional Video17:57
Be Smart

How Every Movie & Video Game Tricks Your Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Movies. Video games. YouTube videos. All of them work because we accidentally figured out a way to fool your brain’s visual processing system, and you don’t even know it’s happening. In this video, I talk to neuroscientist David...
Instructional Video8:35
Be Smart

Why Getting Dizzy is Kinda Like Temporary Brain Damage

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve all gotten dizzy before… but have you ever gotten WEIRD DIZZY? I teamed up with Vanessa Hill from BrainCrat to answer the question “why do we get dizzy?” and in the process we learned about some very strange and hilarious ways to...
Instructional Video29:33
Be Smart

These Death-Eating Scavengers Are Real Life-Savers | IN OUR NATURE

12th - Higher Ed
Seemingly distant ecosystems, even half a world apart, are connected in surprising ways. In this special limited series, Emily Graslie and Trace Dominguez join me as we explore the universal rules of life that tie together Earth’s living...