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Instructional Video3:30
SciShow

The Leidenfrost Effect: How to Make a Liquid Levitate

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Michael Aranda explains what the Leidenfrost Effect is, and how it can cause liquid to 'levitate'. Hosted by: Michael Aranda ---------- Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to put on your walls, cover...
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Instructional Video4:06
SciShow

The Future of 3D Printing

12th - Higher Ed
What do nanobots, better water filtration, and space colonization have in common? They're all being made possible by advances in 3D Printing! This video was made in collaboration with & sponsored by http://www.emerson.com/ilovestem SEM...
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Instructional Video8:51
Curated Video

Will Starshot's Insterstellar Journey Succeed?

12th - Higher Ed
Yuri Milner's Breakthrough Starshot is an interstellar travel expedition unlike any other before it. It's many years in the making and is contingent on a series of incredible advancements in nanotechnology, materials science and laser...
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Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

Sugar, Worms, and Space

12th - Higher Ed
In this week's news, Hank explains how earthworms are doing nanotechnology for us, Americans will soon be eating genetically modified salmon, the Russians are going back to space, and another reason to drink less soda.
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Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

Cannibalism, Zombies & Suicidal Cells: The Latest In Cancer Research

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares some developments in cancer research, from new insights into the behavior of zombie cancer cells, to a new method that uses nanotechnology to kill cancer from within.
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Instructional Video6:40
Be Smart

Where Do Teeth Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
Teeth. We've all got 'em (most of us, anyway). But how do they grow? Teeth are made from some biological nanotechnology that will blow your mind. They are strong enough to last hundreds of millions of years. Oh, and if you've ever...
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Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

Cheap, Fast, Easy, AND Accurate? New COVID Test Might Do it All | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Traditional COVID tests take time and specialized personnel, but a new kind of test that uses nanotechnology could expedite the process.
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Instructional Video3:04
SciShow

Cannibalism, Zombies & Suicidal Cells: The Latest In Cancer Research

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares some developments in cancer research, from new insights into the behavior of zombie cancer cells, to a new method that uses nanotechnology to kill cancer from within.
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Instructional Video3:51
Science360

Investigating the impact of natural and human-made nanomaterials on living things - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Center for Environmental Implications of Nanotechnology develops tools to assess current and future risk Description: We can't see them, but nanomaterials, both natural and human-made, are literally everywhere, from our personal care...
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Instructional Video2:53
World Science Festival

How Do You Make a Nanobot?

6th - 11th
Working at a small scale has big challenges. Nanoroboticist Metin Sitti designs and builds microscopic robots that can venture into the human body. What does it take to build tiny robots? Will this advancing nanotechnology revolutionize...
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Instructional Video59:23
World Science Festival

Nanotech And The Future Of Energy: Much Ado About Nearly Nothing

6th - 11th
Nanotechnology has found its way into a wide range of consumer products, from cell phones to odor-resistant socks. But is this tiny tech up to one of the biggest challenges of our time: meeting the energy demands of an exploding...
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Instructional Video4:10
Big Think

Making cancer as harmless as the common cold | Michio Kaku

6th - 11th
Read more at BigThink.com: Follow Big Think here: YouTube: http://goo.gl/CPTsV5 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BigThinkdotcom Twitter: https://twitter.com/bigthink Michio Kaku: I think we’re entering the fourth wave of scientific...
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Instructional Video1:11
Science360

Ask a Scientist – Superhero Edition 2

12th - Higher Ed
We polled top nano experts for their nanotechnology enabled superpower of choice! In this edition, we hear from Saniya LeBlanc, from George Washington University; Quinn Spadola with the National Nanotechnology Coordination Office; and...
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Instructional Video2:13
Science360

4 Awesome Discoveries You Probably Didn’t Hear About This Week – Episode 8

12th - Higher Ed
Something special in seal blood; a whole new angle on prosthetic ankles; a nanotech inspiration from single-celled architects; and sure, there may be “gold in them thar hills,” but there’s a quadrillion tons of diamonds in the Earth’s...
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Instructional Video4:11
AsapSCIENCE

The 11 Greatest Threats To Humanity

6th - 11th
With Los Angeles wildfires, nuclear war with North Korea, and Jake Paul's Christmas video - what will cause the world to end? Subscribe! http://bit.ly/asapsci Created by: Mitchell Moffit and Gregory Brown Written by: Rachel Salt and...
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Instructional Video4:18
Curated Video

Tiny treasure: The future of nano-gold

9th - 11th
Lumps of gold moulded into rings, coins and ingots have been highly prized for millennia. But recently, scientists have realised that tiny pieces of this precious metal – far too small to be seen by the naked eye - could also become a...
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Instructional Video23:54
Globalive Media

Beyond Innovation: Episode 1

Higher Ed
The Internet-of-Things connects everything, nanotechnology heals damaged brains and a venture capitalist spots medical breakthroughs. Plus, Anthony and Michael speak with David Hanson, the pioneering roboticist behind some of the most...
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Instructional Video4:34
Professor Dave Explains

The Materials of the Future Interesting Allotropes of Carbon

12th - Higher Ed
One of the most impressive aspects of our modern understanding of the world around us is our ability to manipulate matter on the molecular level to generate new materials with interesting properties. This practice has brought about both...
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Instructional Video3:56
Curated Video

How to Get Rid of Skunk Smell

3rd - 11th
Skunks are nocturnal animals that prefer to keep to themselves. However, when they sense danger, this lurking purveyor of biochemical warfare unleashes its primary defense mechanism: a nasty-smelling spray. Similar to tear gas, the scent...
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Instructional Video5:38
Curated Video

What's In Dog Food?

3rd - 11th
Have you ever thought about how strange it is that dogs eat these dry, weird smelling bits of food for their entire lives and never get sick of them? This truly is a scientific puzzle and there are many different types of dog food...
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Instructional Video4:02
Curated Video

Why Flamingos Are Pink and HARDCORE

3rd - 11th
Flamingos may be synonymous with tacky lawn ornaments, but we’re here to tell you they’re one of the most hardcore animals on the planet. They survive where almost nothing else can. And they’re pink too. Subscribe!...
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Instructional Video4:53
Curated Video

Fact or Fiction: Uncooked Rice is Bad for Birds

3rd - 11th
You may have heard that throwing rice at weddings will hurt wild birds. But we’re here to say that myth isn’t backed up by the science -- and we can prove it with chemistry. Subscribe! http://bit.ly/ACSReactions Facebook!...
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Instructional Video3:07
Curated Video

Can Silver Nanoparticles Combat Your Stink?

3rd - 11th
Some clothing makers try to harness the antibacterial power of silver to combat the smell of sweat from your workouts -- now with added nanotechnology. This week on Reactions, we ask: does it work? Subscribe! http://bit.ly/ACSReactions...
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Instructional Video6:57
Tate

Conserving Whaam! | Tate

K - 11th
Roy Lichtenstein's Whaam! is one of the most popular works in Tate's collection and has been on almost constant display since it was acquired in 1966. The materials used to create the painting are challenging for conservators, as they...

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