Instructional Video0:44
MinutePhysics

Youtube Video vs. The Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Youtube Video vs. The Universe
Instructional Video3:47
MinutePhysics

Why It's Impossible to Tune a Piano

12th - Higher Ed
Pianos can't be perfectly tuned - it's a mathematical fact!
Instructional Video2:45
MinuteEarth

Is It Safe To Get Your DNA Tested?

12th - Higher Ed
Once it’s out of your body, your genetic information is valuable to a variety of people, but you can keep it safe(ish) with a few simple steps. ___________________________________________ To learn more, start your googling with these...
Instructional Video15:10
PBS

Why String Theory is Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
There’s this idea that beauty is a powerful guide to truth in the mathematics of physical theory. String theory is certainly beautiful in the eyes of many physicists. Beautiful enough to pursue even if it’s wrong? Hermann Weyl once said,...
Instructional Video13:11
PBS

Black Hole Harmonics

12th - Higher Ed
When physicists talk about black holes they’re usually referring to highly theoretical objects – static, unchanging black holes viewed from “infinitely” far away. This makes everything clean and simple enough to attempt the already...
Instructional Video15:42
PBS

Are Cosmic Strings Cracks in the Universe?

12th - Higher Ed
Reality has cracks in it. Universe-spanning filaments of ancient Big Bang energy, formed from topological defects in the quantum fields, aka cosmic strings. They have subatomic thickness but prodigious mass and they lash through space at...
Instructional Video2:45
MinutePhysics

The Rocket & String Paradox

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about Bell's Spaceship Paradox of Special Relativity, wherein a pair of rockets (or spacecraft) connected by a weak thread accelerate with uniform acceleration, maintaining the same separation, and the question is: does the...
Instructional Video1:43
MinutePhysics

How to Simulate the Universe on your Laptop

12th - Higher Ed
One Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in one minute!
Instructional Video5:09
SciShow

Slug Sex and Bubble Rafts: Nature's Most Unusual Slime

12th - Higher Ed
Slime videos have been a popular trend on YouTube recently, but there are a few animals with their own versions of slime, which they use for some very cool things!
News Clip2:11
Curated Video

When Alana Sanders gave birth to her fourth child, the people on hand to towel off the baby and tie its umbilical cord weren''t the usual team of doctors or nurses.

Higher Ed
HEADLINE: Kids help mom deliver baby brother CAPTION: When their mom went into labor with no one else around, a 9-year-old California boy and his 11-year-old sister quickly responded like pros and helped care for their newborn brother....
Instructional Video13:37
PBS

Why String Theory is Right

12th - Higher Ed
Some see string theory as the one great hope for a theory of everything - that it will unite quantum mechanics and gravity and so unify all of physics into one glorious theory.
Instructional Video2:45
MinuteEarth

Is It Safe To Get Your DNA Tested?

12th - Higher Ed
Once it’s out of your body, your genetic information is valuable to a variety of people, but you can keep it safe(ish) with a few simple steps. ___________________________________________ To learn more, start your googling with these...
Instructional Video21:43
MinutePhysics

Feynman's Lost Lecture (ft. 3Blue1Brown)

12th - Higher Ed
Check out Grant’s channel: 3blue1brown. This video recounts a lecture by Richard Feynman giving an elementary demonstration of why planets orbit in ellipses. See the excellent book by Judith and David Goodstein, "Feynman's lost lecture”,...
Instructional Video5:44
Be Smart

Inside an ICE CAVE! - Nature's Most Beautiful Blue

12th - Higher Ed
Where do glaciers and icebergs get their beautiful blue color? This unique blue might be nature's most brilliant, and the color arises in a very special way thanks to some surprising interactions between light and water molecules. Who...
Instructional Video13:33
PBS

Topology Riddles | Infinite Series

12th - Higher Ed
Can you turn your pants inside out without taking your feet off the ground?
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow Kids

Parachute Adventure! - #sciencegoals

K - 5th
Today is exciting, because Jessi and Squeaks are making parachutes! Tag along to learn how you can make your own, and what forces are being used to make your parachute work!
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

3 Ways to Slingshot a Star

12th - Higher Ed
The star-mapping satellite Gaia has found more than 20 stars speeding across the Milky Way toward intergalactic space. There are just a few things that can slingshot a star out of a galaxy and all of them take some extreme gravitational...
Instructional Video10:38
SciShow

How Knots Help Us Understand the World

12th - Higher Ed
Knots are everywhere in our daily lives, but a new branch of mathematics is taking things to the next level.
Instructional Video3:05
SciShow Kids

Make a Balloon Rocket

K - 5th
This week, experiment with balloons and learn how you can make your very own rocket with Jessi and Squeaks!
Instructional Video10:35
PBS

Can We Hear Shapes?

12th - Higher Ed
Mathematician Mark Kac asked the question "Can we hear the shape of a drum?" It was a question that took over 20 years to answer. Sine waves, fundamental frequencies, eigenvalues, this episode has got it all!
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

Could We Build Weather-Controlling Satellites?

12th - Higher Ed
In some science fiction movies, satellites control the weather in disastrous, but effective ways. Here in reality, we have attempted to influence the weather, with mixed results.
Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

We Don’t Know How To Type

12th - Higher Ed
When we type, our brain is doing most of the work without our conscious input. So you can blame your brain for al teh typsos.
Instructional Video5:12
SciShow

Slug Sex and Bubble Rafts: Nature's Most Unusual Slime

12th - Higher Ed
Slime videos have been a popular trend on YouTube recently, but there are a few animals with their own versions of slime, which they use for some very cool things!
Instructional Video14:24
PBS

Why Computers are Bad at Algebra

12th - Higher Ed
The answer lies in the weirdness of floating-point numbers and the computer's perception of a number line.