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 Video33:33
SciShow

Was the Apollo Program a Bad Idea A SciShow Documentary

12th - Higher Ed
The Apollo program was famous for being risky and expensive. It had a crunched timeline, daring astronauts, and lacked modern tech, and that all kind of makes you wonder… was the Apollo program a bad idea?
Instructional Video11:32
TED Talks

Peter Beck: Small rockets are the next space revolution

12th - Higher Ed
We're in the dawn of a new space revolution, says engineer Peter Beck: the revolution of the small. In a talk packed with insights into the state of the space industry, Beck shares his work building rockets capable of delivering small...
Instructional Video5:36
SciShow

Weird! Signal' Mystery Solved!

12th - Higher Ed
Where did astronomers finally conclude that the 'Weird! Signal' was coming from? What has Elon Musk been up to with SpaceX and the Falcon Heavy rocket?
Instructional Video10:26
TED Talks

TED: How virtual reality can create the ultimate empathy machine | Chris Milk

12th - Higher Ed
Chris Milk uses cutting edge technology to produce astonishing films that delight and enchant. But for Milk, the human story is the driving force behind everything he does. In this short, charming talk, he shows some of his...
Instructional Video3:25
SciShow

The Most Powerful Rocket Ever, and Gecko Sex in Space

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space News shares the latest developments from around the universe, including NASA’s plan to build the world’s most powerful rocket, and the fate of Russian geckos sent to have sex in space.
Instructional Video13:08
TED Talks

Brenda Laurel: Why not make video games for girls?

12th - Higher Ed
At TED in 1998, Brenda Laurel asks: Why are all the top-selling videogames aimed at little boys? She spent two years researching the world of girls (and shares amazing interviews and photos) to create a game that girls would love.
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

Great Minds: Katherine Johnson, Human Computer

12th - Higher Ed
In the early days of spaceflight, if NASA needed to plot a rocket's path or confirm a computer's calculations, they knew who to ask: Katherine Johnson.
Instructional Video3:12
MinutePhysics

Hitting the Sun is HARD

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the orbital mechanics of why it's so hard to crash into the sun - the energy it takes to get there is astoundingly high, compared with leaving the solar system.
Instructional Video3:59
SciShow

Tabby's Strange Star Just Got Stranger

12th - Higher Ed
It's been a year since astronomer Tabetha Boyaijan found strange signals coming from a star called KIC 8462852, aka Tabby's Star. Now, new research shows that it's even stranger than we thought. Plus, good news from spaceflight company...
Instructional Video4:51
SciShow

SpaceX Reused a Rocket!

12th - Higher Ed
This week SpaceX accomplished a first in the history of spaceflight: They reused a rocket big enough to send things into orbit!
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Wernher von Braun: From Nazis to NASA

12th - Higher Ed
The American space program wouldn't be what it is today if it weren't for the contributions of a scientist who was also a former Nazi. Learn about the life and work of rocket scientist Wernher von Braun.
Instructional Video3:44
TED Talks

David Hoffman: Sputnik mania

12th - Higher Ed
Filmmaker David Hoffman shares footage from his feature-length documentary Sputnik Mania, which shows how the Soviet Union's launch of Sputnik in 1957 led to both the space race and the arms race -- and jump-started science and math...
Instructional Video4:31
SciShow

The Giant Wave on Venus

12th - Higher Ed
What was that giant swoop on Venus? And SpaceX continues to move forward.
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

How Would We Stop a Nuclear Missile?

12th - Higher Ed
Most of us are hoping that any nuclear threats are just empty threats, and getting at the facts about ICBMs can be difficult. But what would actually happen if someone launched a nuclear weapon?
Instructional Video4:36
SciShow

The Apollo Program's Loneliest Astronauts

12th - Higher Ed
Michael Collins isn't as recognizable a name as Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong, but his job on the Apollo 11 mission was just as important.
Instructional Video4:43
SciShow

Great Minds: Sergei Korolev, The Chief Designer

12th - Higher Ed
Most people have never heard of him. But Soviet scientist Sergei Korolev quietly developed the revolutionary rocket technology that we still use today.
Instructional Video8:33
TED Talks

TED: Let's launch a satellite to track a threatening greenhouse gas | Fred Krupp

12th - Higher Ed
When we talk about greenhouse gases, carbon dioxide gets the most attention -- but methane, which often escapes unseen from pipes and wells, has a far greater immediate impact on global warming. Environmentalist Fred Krupp has an idea to...
Instructional Video4:08
SciShow

A Surprisingly Simple Secret to Supersonic Flight

12th - Higher Ed
Making a faster plane takes more than building better engines and structures. To go supersonic, engineers had to solve hundreds of problems -- including ditching one of the biggest assumptions in aerodynamics!
Instructional Video4:04
SciShow

The Space Station's Inflatable Room

12th - Higher Ed
An ISS resupply mission is launching today and the space station should have a new inflatable room to experiment with!
Instructional Video3:47
SciShow

SpaceX's Risky Reusable Rocket Launch

12th - Higher Ed
Update: SpaceX has rescheduled the Falcon 9 launch on January, 6th 2015.
Instructional Video3:45
SciShow

Rocket Landing on a Drone Ship!

12th - Higher Ed
Falcon 9 has successfully landed and NASA redirects the Kepler telescope out of emergency mode!
Instructional Video2:17
SciShow

NASA's Plan to Capture an Asteroid

12th - Higher Ed
Caitlin Hofmeister walks you through NASA's planned Asteroid Retrieval Mission, which aims to capture a space-rock and put it in lunar orbit for study -- all by 2025!
Instructional Video5:57
SciShow

The Brightest, Biggest Space News of 2019!

12th - Higher Ed
This has been another really good year for exploring the universe. This is our annual superlatives episode, so let’s take a look at the some of the coolest breakthroughs of 2019.