Instructional Video15:35
PBS

What Makes The Strong Force Strong?

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum mechanics gets weirder as you go to smaller sizes and higher energies. It’s strange enough for atoms, but positively bizarre when we get to the atomic nucleus. And today we’re going nuclear, as we dive into the weird world of...
Instructional Video7:38
SciShow

The Quest for Glueballs

12th - Higher Ed
The quantum world is weird. Today we're looking at a strange particle called a glueball that contains no matter...they're made of pure force!
Instructional Video4:31
SciShow

What Was the Hottest Thing Ever?

12th - Higher Ed
How hot can things really get?
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 Video3:07
SciShow

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

12th - Higher Ed
Part one of a four part series on the fundamental forces (or interactions) of physics begins with the strong force or strong interaction - which on the small scale holds quarks together to form protons, neutrons and other hadron particles.
Instructional Video4:25
Bozeman Science

Strong Nuclear Force

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the strong nuclear force holds the nucleus together in spite of repulsive electrostatic charges acting on the nucleons. Mesons exchanged between nucleons keep the nucleus intact and gluons...
Instructional Video4:18
Professor Dave Explains

Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD)

12th - Higher Ed
Electromagnetic force down, three more forces to go! Which one is next? Why it's the strong nuclear force, famous for keeping atomic nuclei together. What kind of particles will be involved in this quantum field theory? Let's find out.
Instructional Video7:02
Professor Dave Explains

The Standard Model of Particle Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Once you start learning about modern physics, you start to hear about weird particles like quarks and muons and neutrinos. What are all these things? Why are there so many? How do we know they exist? What do they do? Within lies the...