Instructional Video2:18
MinutePhysics

This is Not a Rainbow

12th - Higher Ed
This is Not a Rainbow
Instructional Video7:44
SciShow

The Solar System is Beige

12th - Higher Ed
Whether you grew up with a poster of the solar system on your bedroom wall or not, you've probably got a specific idea of what the planets look like. From brilliantly blue Neptune to the "red planet" Mars. But if you managed to actually...
Instructional Video6:09
SciShow

What Color Was the Big Bang?

12th - Higher Ed
If you could survive a trip to the very first moments of reality as we know it, what color would you see?
Instructional Video2:58
SciShow

These Beetles Are Bright and Shiny… For Camouflage

12th - Higher Ed
Jewel beetles are pretty eye-catching with their glossy, bright coloration. But if you were a small creature that needed to avoid predators, you might think that eye-catching is the last thing you'd want to be. But it turns out that...
Instructional Video3:36
SciShow

The Strange Effects of Diamond Dust

12th - Higher Ed
Bright pillars of light... clouds of glowing dust... shimmering discs floating around the sun... signs of extraterrestrial activity, or is there a more rational and scientific explanation for this phenomenon?
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow

Why is Indigo in the Rainbow?

12th - Higher Ed
Indigo may be a very vague and unnecessary color, but it has an interesting history that involves some plants, turmoil, and Isaac Newton's interest in the number seven. Hosted by: Hank Green
Instructional Video22:02
SciShow Kids

Fun in the Sun | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
It’s a sunny day at The Fort, so Squeaks and Mr. Brown are watching videos from the past to remind themselves of all the fun experiments they can do when it’s sunny outside!
Instructional Video6:48
TED Talks

TED: A colorful case for outside-the-box thinking on identity | Olivia Vinckier

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever been forced to limit your identity to a single box on an application, survey or census questionnaire? For many, it is a futile and overall outdated exercise, especially for those with multiracial and multi-ethnic...
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

3 Strange-Looking Kinds of Clouds

12th - Higher Ed
What do you see in clouds? Bunnies? Zombies? The face of Nic Cage? There are some kinds of clouds that, while rare, make even weirder shapes -- like pancakes, rolling cylinders, and shimmery rainbows.
Instructional Video5:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How quantum mechanics explains global warming - Lieven Scheire

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You've probably heard that carbon dioxide is warming the Earth. But how exactly is it doing it? Lieven Scheire uses a rainbow, a light bulb and a bit of quantum physics to describe the science behind global warming.
Instructional Video4:44
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How do we study the stars? - Yuan-Sen Ting

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Our best technology can send men to the Moon and probes to the edge of our solar system, but these distances are vanishingly small compared to the size of the universe. How then can we learn about the galaxies beyond our own? Yuan-Sen...
Instructional Video3:17
Be Smart

This Is Not a Rainbow

12th - Higher Ed
The furthest extremes of light refraction phenomena.
Instructional Video2:21
SciShow

World's Most Asked Questions Why is the Sky Blue

12th - Higher Ed
People ask Google everything under the sun. One of the most commonly searched questions in the world is “Why Is the Sky Blue?” Allow us at SciShow to explain.
Instructional Video1:04
MinutePhysics

There is No Pink Light

12th - Higher Ed
There is No Pink Light
Instructional Video10:49
TED Talks

TED: A realistic vision for world peace | Jody Williams

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Peace laureate Jody Williams brings tough love to the dream of world peace, with her razor-sharp take on what "peace" really means, and a set of profound stories that zero in on the creative struggle -- and sacrifice -- of those...
Instructional Video2:31
MinutePhysics

Why Isn't The Sky Purple

12th - Higher Ed
Why isn't the sky violet?
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

3 Brand New Colors That Scientists Discovered

12th - Higher Ed
For millennia, we mostly had to make do with natural pigments and dyes, but in the last 300 years or so, chemical synthesis has revolutionized the colors of our world.
Instructional Video5:36
Be Smart

What Are Rainbows?

12th - Higher Ed
Dorothy went over one. LeVar Burton read to us under one. In a song, Kermit the Frog connected us to one. Even Mork's suspenders were made of them. Our culture, and our skies, are full of rainbows, but do you know how they form? Do we...
Instructional Video2:50
SciShow Kids

Why Is the Sky Blue?

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks love watching clouds and birds fly way up in the sky! But why is the sky blue?
Instructional Video5:14
SciShow

Why Is My Pee Green?

12th - Higher Ed
How worried should you be when your urine isn't yellow, but instead it's green, red, or even black?
Instructional Video3:02
SciShow

These Beetles Are Bright and Shiny… For Camouflage

12th - Higher Ed
Jewel beetles are pretty eye-catching with their glossy, bright coloration. But if you were a small creature that needed to avoid predators, you might think that eye-catching is the last thing you'd want to be. But it turns out that...
Instructional Video2:53
MinutePhysics

This is Not a Rainbow

12th - Higher Ed
This is Not a Rainbow
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

Why is Indigo in the Rainbow?

12th - Higher Ed
Indigo may be a very vague and unnecessary color, but it has an interesting history that involves some plants, turmoil, and Isaac Newton's interest in the number seven.
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow Kids

Why Are Foods Many Colors? | The Science of Colors! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Jessi helps Squeaks learn about why foods can be so many tasty-looking colors!