Instructional Video4:13
Be Smart

The Cosmic Origins of Earth's Water

12th - Higher Ed
Why is Earth is a blue planet? Because it's covered in water! Where did Earth's water come from? Of course, water isn't unique to our planet. The origin of water traces beyond the solar system to the earliest days of the universe. Here's...
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Could we create dark matter? - Rolf Landua

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Eighty-five percent of the matter in our universe is dark matter. We don't know what dark matter is made of, and we've yet to directly observe it, but scientists theorize that we may actually be able to create it in the Large Hadron...
Instructional Video4:13
SciShow

World's Most Asked Questions What Is Energy

12th - Higher Ed
What is Energy? The short answer is EVERYTHING. But what does that mean? Let SciShow explain.
Instructional Video5:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How to build a fictional world - Kate Messner

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Why is J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy so compelling? How about The Matrix or Harry Potter? What makes these disparate worlds come alive are clear, consistent rules for how people, societies -- and even the laws of physics --...
Instructional Video4:11
SciShow

Why's a Meter a Meter?

12th - Higher Ed
Meter is the standard unit of length used by most countries around the world. But how did they define it?
Instructional Video25:56
SciShow

Magnificent Magnetic Fields | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
Magnetic fields fill our universe, but here at home we have a very special one that nature uses in a myriad of ways. And further away, other magnetic fields give us fascinating glimpses into the nature of the universe!
Instructional Video3:21
SciShow

Strong Interaction: The Four Fundamental Forces of Physics #1b

12th - Higher Ed
Hank continues his primer on the strongest of the four fundamental interactions of physics, the strong interaction. Today he talks about the nuclear force and a force carrier called a pion.
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

The Coldest Place in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
When the Cold Atom Laboratory launches to the International Space Station in 2016, it will become the coldest spot in the universe. Learn how scientists are going to get closer than ever to absolute zero -- and why they want to.
Instructional Video2:45
SciShow

π 'N' Science

12th - Higher Ed
It's pi day! Hank explains why this irrational number is important to scientists, and discusses a bit of a controversy that surrounds it.
Instructional Video12:31
Crash Course

Entropy: Embrace the Chaos! Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Life is chaos and the universe tends toward disorder. But why? If you think about it, there are only a few ways for things to be arranged in an organized manner, but there are nearly infinite other ways for those same things to be...
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

Could Life Survive Without a Star?

12th - Higher Ed
There are billions of planets out there that don't orbit stars. The sheer abundance of these planets has led some scientists to wonder if life could emerge without a star.
Instructional Video8:25
SciShow

How Do We Measure the Distance of Stars?

12th - Higher Ed
It's School of YouTube Week! Comic Relief and YouTube are partnering to send students to school! The Bad Astronomer Phil Plait teaches Hank how to measure the distance to the stars.
Instructional Video5:42
SciShow

Mama, Where Do Galaxies Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
For most of human history, we didn't know that galaxies were a thing. So over the past century, astronomers have been working to understand how galaxies come to be and how they evolve over time. And for a full decade, there was one...
Instructional Video10:23
Crash Course

Light

12th - Higher Ed
In order to understand how we study the universe, we need to talk a little bit about light. Light is a form of energy. Its wavelength tells us its energy and color. Spectroscopy allows us to analyze those colors and determine an object’s...
Instructional Video2:40
MinutePhysics

What Is The Universe

12th - Higher Ed
What Is The Universe
Instructional Video4:08
SciShow

The Wow! Signal

12th - Higher Ed
Deep in an archive in Columbus, Ohio, there's a slip of paper with a bunch of random-looking letters and numbers printed on it called the âWow' signal.
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow

The First Neutron Star Collision We've Ever Seen

12th - Higher Ed
The results are in from the neutron star collision this past August! Astronomers are revealing what they've learned so far, with more pure gold research underway!
Instructional Video3:09
SciShow

How Many Stars Are There?

12th - Higher Ed
How many stars are there in the universe? This question leads Hank to a couple other questions - How many stars can we see from Earth? How many stars are there in our galaxy? - but the answer to the original question proves elusive.
Instructional Video5:28
PBS

Cosmic Microwave Background Explained

12th - Higher Ed
HAS SPACE ALWAYS BEEN BLACK? As long as we've been around, YES. But the universe gets much more exciting, AND much BRIGHTER, as we start winding our clocks back to the early days of the universe. Near the beginning of the universe, when...
Instructional Video4:17
SciShow

The Most Sophisticated Mirror in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Hank summarizes the five reasons why infrared telescopes were supposed to be impossible to build, and then describes how a team of scientists and engineers overcame those obstacles to build the James Webb Space Telescope.
Instructional Video2:07
MinutePhysics

Why the Solar System Can Exist

12th - Higher Ed
If gravity is so attractive, why doesn't the earth just crash into the sun? Or the moon into the earth? The answer: Stable Orbits
Instructional Video5:10
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is math discovered or invented? - Jeff Dekofsky

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Would mathematics exist if people didn't? Did we create mathematical concepts to help us understand the world around us, or is math the native language of the universe itself? Jeff Dekofsky traces some famous arguments in this ancient...
Instructional Video4:43
SciShow

Where Did the Big Bang Happen?

12th - Higher Ed
The name “The Big Bang” makes it sound like there was a big explosion in one particular spot, but if that’s the case, where did it happen?
Instructional Video5:06
MinutePhysics

Relativistic Addition of Velocity | Special Relativity Ch. 6

12th - Higher Ed
This video is chapter 6 in my series on special relativity, and it covers the topic of relativistic addition of velocity: aka, how things that are moving relative to one inertial reference frame, which is moving relative to another...