Instructional Video5:56
Science360

Alfred Russel Wallace's personal cabinet

12th - Higher Ed
Take a look inside Alfred Russel Wallace's personal cabinet full of bugs and butterflies collected over his lifetime. Discovered by a Washington, D.C., lawyer in search of antique furniture, this is truly a Cabinet of Wonders, for inside...
Instructional Video2:11
The Backyard Scientist

Underwater Explosions - Slow Motion Dry Ice Bomb.

K - 5th
Underwater explosions using Dry Ice, and Liquid Nitrogen, and captured in high definition slow motion. Hey guys, Backyard Scientist here. I this video I throw water bottles filled with dry ice, and liquid nitrogen into my pool. This is...
Instructional Video2:23
Science360

Testing Ways to Protect Against Natural Hazards - NHERI

12th - Higher Ed
The National Science Foundation's NHERI Experimental Facilities allow researchers to test ground-breaking concepts to protect our infrastructure against natural hazards, and enable innovations that help prevent natural hazards from...
Instructional Video1:48
Science360

Self-Sacrifice Among Strangers Has More to Do with Nurture than Nature

12th - Higher Ed
Socially learned behavior and belief are much better candidates than genetics to explain the self-sacrificing behavior we see among strangers in societies, from soldiers to blood donors to those who contribute to food banks. This is the...
Instructional Video3:46
Science360

Greenhouse Gas Emissions - History Of Climate Change Research

12th - Higher Ed
When was it first determined that greenhouse gas emissions were causing warming?
Instructional Video1:40
Science360

Stretchable, flexible, ultra-thin batteries made with zinc – Imprint Energy

12th - Higher Ed
The rapidly growing portable electronics industry means huge demand for affordable, durable batteries that pack more energy. Imprint Energy, a small business funded by the National Science Foundation, is pioneering a new way to...
Instructional Video1:06
Science360

NSF Director on 1st cosmic event seen in gravitational waves and in light

12th - Higher Ed
Excerpts from National Science Foundation Director France Córdova's remarks at the press conference announcing the first gravitational wave detection of a neutron star collision and the first time a cosmic event was seen both in...
Instructional Video8:22
Science360

Research gov Site Demonstration Part 1 Public Services

12th - Higher Ed
Research gov is an exciting initiative that enables organizations and researchers to access streamlined research grants management services and other resources for multiple federal agencies in one location. This video provides an...
Instructional Video3:51
Science360

Listener fatigue prompts research and in-ear headphone redesign

12th - Higher Ed
A novel device with rock 'n' roll roots may protect listeners from potential dangers of personal listening devices and hearing aids. Engineers investigating "listener fatigue"--the discomfort and pain some people experience while using...
Instructional Video7:33
The Backyard Scientist

Molten Aluminum Volcano [ERUPTION]

K - 5th
Molten Aluminum Volcano
Instructional Video46:57
Science360

Human Spark Project - Webcast with Alan Alda

12th - Higher Ed
Funded in part by the National Science Foundation, the television series, The Human Spark, engages host Alan Alda with dozens of scientists across three continents to get at the sources of human uniqueness through the lenses of...
Instructional Video3:17
Science360

Rock arches are singing and scientists are listening - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Geologists tune into the vibrations of natural arches to help assess structural integrity and possible collapse Description: A University of Utah research team is perfectly situated to study rock arches. Arches National Park in Utah has...
Instructional Video2:52
Science360

Next Generation Arctic Research Vessel On-track for Voyage of Discovery - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
The National Science Foundation (NSF), in cooperation with the Marinette Marine Corporation (MMC) and the University of Alaska, Fairbanks (UAF), has successfully launched the R/V Sikuliaq, a "next-generation" global class research...
Instructional Video3:24
Science360

Engineering a more efficient way to diagnose prostate cancer - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
To diagnose prostate cancer, urologists, such as John Wei, and pathologists, such as Scott Tomlins, at the University of Michigan Health System, use biomarkers, which are biochemical signatures in blood, urine and tissue that suggest the...
Instructional Video1:57
Science360

PredPol Algorithms for predicting crime

12th - Higher Ed
Big city crime is nothing new. But the Los Angeles Police Department has a way to stay a step ahead of criminals and efficiently allocate police resources. With support from the National Science Foundation, a team at UCLA developed...
Instructional Video7:43
Science360

Research on popular sentiments in the Middle East - Long interview

12th - Higher Ed
Mansoor Moaddel, Professor of Sociology at Eastern Michigan University and Research Affiliate of the Population Studies Center at the University of Michigan, is a world-renowned expert on public sentiments in the Middle East. In this...
Instructional Video3:49
Science360

Helping stroke survivors walk as normally as possible - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Research team focuses on “locomotor learning” for lasting rehabilitation Description: A major issue in rehabilitation robotics is that devices such as exoskeletons and treadmills correct patients' movements only while they are using the...
Instructional Video4:20
The Backyard Scientist

Do hot objects fall through water faster? Leidenfrost Effect!

K - 5th
Today I put the Leidenfrost effect to the test! Im trying out a great question from somebody on my facebook page. He wanted to know if a hot object will fall faster than a cold object through water. I set up my fishtank and dropped...
Instructional Video1:11:57
Science360

NSF media briefing - The Event Horizon Telescope, a year after the black hole image

12th - Higher Ed
Panelists Sheperd S. Doeleman, founding director of the Event Horizon Telescope (EHT), which produced the first image of a black hole, and Michael Johnson, astrophysicist, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, answer questions...
Instructional Video0:42
Science360

Internet of Things privacy app shows IoT tech around you and what data they're collecting

12th - Higher Ed
New infrastructure will enhance privacy in today’s Internet of Things https://cylab.cmu.edu/news/2020/02/19-privacy-assistant.html Internet of Things (IoT) Portal: https://www.iotprivacy.io/login IoT Assistant app is available in both...
Instructional Video2:18
The Backyard Scientist

Molten Aluminum Vs. Lava Lamp

K - 5th
Ever wonder what would happen If you poured molten aluminum into a lava lamp? Me neither. Well, you voted, I listened! Some of my viewers on my Facebook, and G+ pages suggested that I pour molten aluminum into a Lava Lamp. That sounded...
Instructional Video4:07
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Snowboarding

12th - Higher Ed
The stakes are high for the snowboarders in Vancouver as they try to master new tricks to unseat the star of Torino, American Shaun White. But to get "max air" off the half-pipe without losing their balance, they might want to check out...
Instructional Video5:24
Science360

The Mission of the Office of Legislative and Public Affairs

12th - Higher Ed
What is the mission of the Office of Legislative and Public Affairs within the National Science Foundation? What is OLPA currently working on and what are its goals for the future? This video explains all the above and shows you what the...
Instructional Video1:43
Science360

Listening to classical music while you sleep may improve test scores

12th - Higher Ed
Listening to classical music while you sleep may improve test scores. Baylor University researchers with funding from the National Science Foundation have discovered that college students who listened to classical music during a...