Instructional Video17:02
PBS

Can We Create New Elements Beyond the Periodic Table

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewScientists have been slowly extending the periodic table one element at a time, pushing to higher and higher masses, and have discovered some incredibly useful materials along the way. But the elements at the current end of the table are...
Instructional Video11:44
PBS

Can the Universe Remember? Exploring Gravitational Memory

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThere are cosmic events so powerful that they leave permanent marks on the fabric of the universe itself. Imagine two colossal black holes spiraling into each other, yes they send ripples in the fabric of spacetime—gravitational waves...
Instructional Video16:29
PBS

How To Detect Faster Than Light Travel

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWarp drives may or may not be possible, but if they are then could a distant alien civilization’s warp fields produce gravitational waves that we could see here on Earth? According to a recent study.. Actually maybe, at least eventually....
Instructional Video10:48
PBS

Breaking The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum mechanics forbids us from measuring the universe beyond a certain level of precision. But that doesn’t stop us from trying. And in some cases succeeding, by squeezing the Heisenberg uncertainty principle to its breaking point.
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 Video16:42
PBS

Could LIGO Find MASSIVE Alien Spaceships?

12th - Higher Ed
Whenever we open a new window on the universe, we discover things that no one expected. Our newfound ability to measure ripples in the fabric of spacetime—gravitational waves—is a very new window, and so far we’ve seen a lot of wild...
Instructional Video5:01
PBS

Cosmic Microwave Background Challenge | Space Time | PBS Digital Studios

12th - Higher Ed
If a photon leaves the train station shortly after the Big Bang ...
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 Video8:20
PBS

The Future of Gravitational Waves

12th - Higher Ed
On September 14th, 2015 LIGO announced the first detection of a gravitational wave. This was hailed at the time as the dawn of gravitational wave astronomy. However that’s only true if the we ever detect another gravitational wave. Now...
Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

When Athletes Dope ... & Einstein FTW

12th - Higher Ed
This week's SciShow news has Hank bringing us a primer on the science behind various illegal and illicit ways in which athletes "improve" their bodies, proof of general relativity that we can actually see, and a new way to measure how...
Instructional Video9:58
SciShow

10 Things We Didn't Know 100 Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
In just the last century, we've made an astounding amount of scientific progress. And thanks to some of that progress, we can now share 10 of those discoveries with you in a video on the internet!
Instructional Video3:37
MinutePhysics

How We Know Black Holes Exist

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) and Space Telescope Science Institute for supporting this video. This video is about the astronomical amount of astronomical evidence for black holes, ranging from x-ray binaries with...
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

The 2017 Nobel Prizes: Biological Clocks and Microscopy

12th - Higher Ed
Last week, the recipients of the 2017 Nobel Prizes were announced. We take a closer look at the winners of the Physiology and Chemistry Awards, whose breakthroughs change the way we study sleep, and allow us to look at microscopic...
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow

Radioactive Iron Rain!

12th - Higher Ed
This week on SciShow Space News we're talking about gravity waves (not gravitational waves) on Pluto, and radioactive interstellar rain on Earth!
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

Why We're Building Underground Telescopes

12th - Higher Ed
Obviously most telescopes need to see the sky to do their job, but when you are studying a wave that can pass right through the earth, the best place for your telescope might be underground.
Instructional Video6:45
SciShow

How Two Dead Stars Sparked a New Field of Astronomy

12th - Higher Ed
Pulsars are more than just cool blinking lights shining across the universe. The discovery of the first binary pulsar paved the way for gravitational wave astronomy astronomy today.
Instructional Video5:55
SciShow

3 of the Biggest Experiments Ever

12th - Higher Ed
Whether it's robots under the sea, wave detectors in space, or star-power on land, this episode has big experiments covered.
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

This Might Be a Brand-New Kind of Star | Space News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have theorized about an invisible star made up of theoretic particles in the past, but did we recently detect the gravitational waves of two of them colliding? Plus, extraterrestrial rocks from a decades-old mission keep...
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

This Planet Used to Be the Core of a Gas Giant? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists may have found the light from two merging black holes, and a gas giant, without the gas.
Instructional Video16:09
SciShow

From Wombat Butts to Quantum Mechanics | SciShow Quiz Show

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow script writer and D&D enthusiast Alexa Billow goes head to head against Hank in his 50th Quiz Show appearance! Who will win in the battle of Wombat Butts and Quantum Mechanics?
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

How We Learned Black Holes Actually Exist | 2020 Nobel Prize in Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know Einstein never thought we’d find actual black holes in space? It took decades of research to show black holes are physically possible, and some of the scientists behind that research were honored this year with the Nobel...
Instructional Video3:36
SciShow

The Theory of Everything...A Little Bit Closer

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains how a recent astronomical discovery made in Antarctica could change what we know about the birth of the universe, and the rules of physics that govern it.
Instructional Video4:30
SciShow

The Amazing Cosmic Discovery That Almost Was

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space News revisits one of the biggest (potential) astronomical discoveries of 2014, one that promised to revolutionize our understanding of the formation of the universe. Turns out, we're not quite there yet.
Instructional Video6:05
SciShow

Found: The Missing Link of Black Holes | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have been trying to figure out black holes for hundreds of years, and newly published research may hold some big clues! Plus, rust isn’t supposed to happen in dry and airless places like the Moon. Could the elements that...