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Instructional Video2:49
Curated Video

A Good Experiment, Defined

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum physicist Artur Ekert (Oxford and NUS) uses Alain Aspect's famous experiment of the Bell inequalities as an example of what an experiment should be.
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Instructional Video10:24
SciShow

Great Minds: Richard Feynman, The Great Explainer

9th - 12th
Who is known for his bongo playing and solving the hardest algebra problem of all time? Richard Feynman loved to solve puzzles and didn't handle being bored very well. He is known for the Feynman diagrams that explain quantum...
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Instructional Video1:07
National Woman's History Museum

Women's History Minute: Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu

6th - 12th Standards
Born in Suzhou, China, experimental physicist Dr. Chien-Shiung Wu immigrated to the United States, where she worked on the Manhattan Project. A short video introduces viewers to the amazing achievements of this remarkable woman.
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Instructional Video4:38
TED-Ed

Schrödinger's Cat: A Thought Experiment in Quantum Mechanics

11th - Higher Ed Standards
Can something be both alive and dead at the same time? According to quantum physicist Erwin Schrödinger, the answer is yes. Watch this short video to learn how the wave and particle nature of all matter allows objects to be in two states...
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Instructional Video2:41
MinutePhysics

Relativity Isn't Relative

9th - 12th Standards
Discuss relativity as it relates to objects, science, and famous relativity theories. It offers ideas of why scientists don't use relative terms if they can avoid them. It even covers the concepts scientists once thought weren't relative...
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Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

Great Minds: James Clerk Maxwell, Electromagnetic Hero

9th - 12th
What do Saturn's rings, electromagnetism, and the first color photograph all have in common? James Clerk Maxwell discovered them all! Learn about one of the founders of modern physics with a video biography of his academic discoveries...
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Instructional Video4:43
Be Smart

How Many Species Are There?

6th - 12th Standards
Scientists discover over 15,000 new species each year. Despite studying life on our planet for all of human history, we still don't know how many species exist on Earth. An informative video from a biology playlist presents the dilemma,...
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Instructional Video12:20
Crash Course

Intro to History of Science: Crash Course History of Science #1

9th - 12th Standards
How, and where, did the scientific process as we know it begin? Journey back through time with the introductory video from Crash Course's History of Science series. The resource highlights what people do and don't know about the world,...
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Instructional Video1:50
MinutePhysics

Einstein and The Special Theory of Relativity

9th - 12th
Einstein's best-known work not only demonstrates that time itself is relative, but also shows how matter moves. An animated video illustrates the problem of motion, the concept of perspective, and the breakthrough idea that time is not a...
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Instructional Video1:19
MinutePhysics

Albert Einstein: Why Light is Quantum

9th - 12th
While we are all familiar with what happens when you turn on a light bulb, Albert Einstein was convinced that there was more happening than meets the eye. The video describes his extension of the research of others to ultimately...
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Instructional Video5:24
Physics Girl

Bizarre Spinning Toys

9th - Higher Ed Standards
Objects don't always behave the way we think they will. A video lesson gives some clarity to the movement of spinning objects. The instructor applies the concepts of torque and angular momentum in an episode of a physics playlist.