Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

How To X-Ray A Black Hole

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are everywhere, including at the center of our galaxy. But because they’re invisible they’re quite difficult to study. Looking at the disks of material surrounding them, however, can give us tons of clues about how they...
Instructional Video5:31
SciShow

Making a Realistic Simulation of the Sun

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve created simulations to recreate the difference in time it takes for the Sun’s equator and poles to complete rotations, and the way we’ve solved is a bit surprising. And it looks like the Milky Way may not be great at mixing metals,...
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

The Mysterious Cosmic Explosion Called “The Cow” | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
The exploding “cow” around 200 million light-years away is running astronomers for a loop, but if it is what some hypothesize, we are witnessing a first for astronomy! Meanwhile, we got photographic evidence of a planet orbiting a binary...
Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

The Astronomical Records in… Trees?

12th - Higher Ed
We can learn a lot about our galaxy by looking to the stars, but we can also reveal a lot about our cosmic history from... Dead trees?
Instructional Video5:04
SciShow

The Key to Finding Life Elsewhere in the Universe: Purple Planets?!?

12th - Higher Ed
Some scientists believe that 3.6 billion years ago Earth might have been purple, and that theory is giving us some clues in our search for life in the universe.
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow

Roswell & New Signals from Space

12th - Higher Ed
With news of radio signals from distant galaxies, a government agency that wants to investigate extra-terrestrial life, and the 66th anniversary of the Roswell Incident, this week has felt like a '90s science fiction melodrama. Hank's...
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Will Space Settlers Live in Fungi Buildings?

12th - Higher Ed
What if we could grow buildings on other worlds? Researchers are looking to fungi to help us colonize the stars
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

Detecting Tornadoes Early by Observing Lightning... from Space

12th - Higher Ed
It’s handy having a view of Earth from space. This particular view may be one that changes the way we predict weather phenomena.
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

Other Worlds on Earth: Preparing for Space from Home

12th - Higher Ed
Other worlds don't seem very welcoming to us Earthlings, and it can be hard to practice our off-world explorations from millions of kilometers away. But Earth also has its fair share of hostile places that we can use to prepare for those...
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

The Hubble was Almost a $15B Disaster

12th - Higher Ed
The Hubble Space Telescope has been sending home images of the universe for more than thirty years, but none of its work would have been possible without the many servicing missions that kept it up to date.
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow

A Raindrop Is a Raindrop, Even When It’s Metal

12th - Higher Ed
On earth it rains water, on the exoplanet WASP-76b, it rains liquid iron, but no matter what planet you're on, the rain drops there have a lot more in common than you might think.
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

We Still Can't Find the First Stars in the Universe | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers looking farther back in time than ever before are giving us a better idea of what the early universe must have been like, and we've identified another of the mysterious ultraluminous X-ray pulsars.
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

We’ve Found a New(ish) Type of Supernova

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve known about different types of supernovas for some time, but researchers now believe they have observed a previously unseen kind! And, sadly, the odds of life on Venus may not be as high as we once believed.
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

Why We Didn't Know How Long a Venus Day Was

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers have finally determined how long a day on Venus is, give or take an episode of Brooklyn 99.
Instructional Video2:58
SciShow

Earth Has Another Magnetic Field

12th - Higher Ed
You probably know about the geomagnetic field that protects the earth from solar storms and radiation. But precision satellites have measured ANOTHER magnetic field coming from Earth, and its signals might hold the key to searching for...
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

What's Next for the James Webb Space Telescope

12th - Higher Ed
It finally happened! The James Webb Space Telescope is on its way to capturing never-before-seen images of the universe! But now that it’s airborne and unfurled, what are its next steps before it can deliver the goods?
Instructional Video3:41
SciShow

Is the Size of Neutron Stars A Lie, Or Only A FRIB?

12th - Higher Ed
Have we been wrong about how big neutron stars are this whole time?
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Eclipses That Don't Eclipse

12th - Higher Ed
Here on Earth, we’re used to seeing both lunar and solar eclipses. But further out are eclipses that don’t behave at all the way we expected them to.
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

Great Minds: Dr. Judith Resnik and the Icebusters

12th - Higher Ed
In 1984, ice was accumulating on the side of the Space Shuttle Discovery, spelling possible disaster, luckily it was the first mission of Dr. Judith Resnik, and the Canadarm.
Instructional Video6:06
SciShow

The Telescope That Revealed the X-Ray Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Some of the most exciting phenomena in space can’t be seen from Earth because our atmosphere soaks up high-energy light. That’s why NASA built Chandra, the most powerful X-ray telescope ever launched, and the observatory has helped...
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

These Stars Are Being Eaten Alive from the Inside

12th - Higher Ed
In general, a star’s size will determine its final destiny. Some stars fizzle out, while others explode, and what seals their fate may come down to a curious, cannibalistic process happening inside their cores!
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

3 Ways to Explore the “Ignorosphere"

12th - Higher Ed
One of the hardest places to explore in space is actually pretty close, some call it the ignorosphere.
Instructional Video2:47
SciShow

Asteroids to Watch Out For

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us about NASA's Near-Earth Object Program, which tracks the paths of asteroids and categorizes them according to the likelihood that they will strike the Earth at some point in the future.
Instructional Video7:48
SciShow

Great Minds We Lost in 2012

12th - Higher Ed
Hank pays tribute to some of the great scientific minds we lost in 2012, and then apologizes for some mistakes made in recent SciShow episodes.