Instructional Video6:10
Physics Girl

Epic Space Rescues ft. BrainCraft

9th - 12th
In The Martian, astronaut Mark Watney is stranded alone on Mars and must be rescued. It is an exciting tale of what could happen once humans start traveling to the red planet. Let’s take a look back at the most epic space rescues in...
Instructional Video5:32
FuseSchool

Laws of Indices - Part 1

6th - Higher Ed
Laws of Indices - Part 1 | Algebra | Maths | FuseSchool The laws of indices make complex sums involving powers much easier to handle. There are 6 laws we need to know and understand: how to multiply and divide with indices, raising a...
Instructional Video0:59
NASA

EPIC Observations of Ice in Earth's Atmosphere

3rd - 11th
Parked in space a million miles from Earth, the Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) onboard the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) captures glimmers of reflected sunlight, evidence of ice crystals in the atmosphere. Credit:...
Instructional Video2:03
NASA

An EPIC View of the Moon’s Shadow During the June 10 Solar Eclipse

3rd - 11th
NASA’s EPIC, Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC), sits aboard NOAA’s Deep Space Climate Observatory Satellite (DSCOVR). EPIC provides high-quality, color images of Earth, which are useful for monitoring factors like the planet’s...
Instructional Video2:03
Brian McLogan

What is an angle and it's parts

12th - Higher Ed
👉 Learn how to define angle relationships. Knowledge of the relationships between angles can help in determining the value of a given angle. The various angle relationships include: vertical angles, adjacent angles, complementary angles,...
Instructional Video1:42
NASA

NASA | EPIC Observations Pouring In

3rd - 11th
It’s a fresh view of Earth. Less than a year after its launch on the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR), NASA’s onboard camera is taking images of the entire sunlit side of Earth every two hours.
Instructional Video14:46
Crash Course

The Evolutionary Epic Crash Course Big History 5

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green, Hank Green, and Emily Graslie teach you about evolution. So, in the last 3.8 billion years, life on Earth has evolved from single-celled prokaryotes to the dizzying array of life we have today. So how did all this...
Instructional Video1:15
NASA

EPIC New Science from 1 Million Miles Away

3rd - 11th
NASA's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) sits onboard NOAA's Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite at the Lagrange point 1, a million miles away from Earth. EPIC has been imaging the sunlit side of Earth between 13...
Instructional Video0:32
NASA

NASA Satellites See Wildfires from Space

3rd - 11th
As wildfires burn across California, NASA satellites help gather data about where the fires are and how smoke travels across the state. The smoke from the fires is even visible a million miles away from Earth, captured by NASA's Earth...
Instructional Video11:04
PBS

A Natural History of Mars

12th - Higher Ed
While Earth’s natural history has been playing out over the last few billion years, another epic planetary saga has also been unfolding right next door.
Instructional Video3:55
National Geographic

Crashing Into Saturn: This Cassini Mission Is the Most Epic Yet | Short Film Showcase

Pre-K - 11th
In this stunning animation, watch NASA's Cassini spacecraft begin the last chapter of its 20-year mission to Saturn. Diving deeper into Saturn's rings than ever before, scientists hope that the data from Cassini's final orbits will help...
Instructional Video6:32
NASA

Cassini's Infrared Saturn | Director's Cut

3rd - 11th
The Cassini-Huygens mission arrived at Saturn in 2004, beginning an epic thirteen-year tour of the ringed planet and its many moons. Cassini and its companion probe, Huygens, were an international collaboration between NASA and the...
Instructional Video4:57
Neuro Transmissions

What Is Energy?

12th - Higher Ed
Energy is vital to powering our brains, our bodies, and our entire universe. Find out a little more about the different kinds of energy and how they impact your on a daily basis.
Instructional Video4:02
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How epic solar winds make brilliant polar lights - Michael Molina

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Why do we see those stunning lights in the northern- and southernmost portions of the night sky? The Aurora Borealis and Aurora Australis occur when high-energy particles are flung from the Sun's corona toward the Earth and mingle with...
Instructional Video7:22
Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell

Everything You Need to Know About Planet Earth

6th - 11th
Planet Earth is this solid thing you are standing on right now. In your everyday life you don't really waste a thought about how amazing this is. A giant, ancient, hot rock. How did it come into existence and how big is it really? You...
Instructional Video7:22
Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell

Everything You Need to Know About Planet Earth

6th - 11th
Planet Earth is this solid thing you are standing on right now. In your everyday life you don't really waste a thought about how amazing this is. A giant, ancient, hot rock. How did it come into existence and how big is it really? You...
Instructional Video15:37
TED Talks

TED: Life-altering questions about the end of the universe | Katie Mack

12th - Higher Ed
In this fascinating conversation, cosmologist and TED Fellow Katie Mack delves into everything from the Big Bang theory to what we see at the edge of the observable universe to a few ways the cosmos might end. Stay tuned to hear Mack...
Instructional Video2:47
NASA

One Year on Earth – Seen From 1 Million Miles

3rd - 11th
On July 20, 2015, NASA released to the world the first image of the sunlit side of Earth captured by the space agency's EPIC camera on NOAA's DSCOVR satellite. The camera has now recorded a full year of life on Earth from its orbit at...
Instructional Video9:26
NASA

Cassini's Infrared Saturn

3rd - 11th
The Cassini-Huygens mission arrived at Saturn in 2004, beginning an epic thirteen-year tour of the ringed planet and its many moons. Cassini and its companion probe, Huygens, were an international collaboration between NASA and the...
Instructional Video22:01
SWPictures

Helping Social Entrepreneurs - Sustainable Fishing

12th - Higher Ed
Sustainable fishing is important for the millions of fishermen who depend on the oceans for their livelihood and to the billions of people who eat fish. But at the moment there is little sustainable fishing. The Marine Stewardship...
Instructional Video1:16
National Geographic

This Season On MARS - Preview | MARS

Pre-K - 11th
The mission to colonize Mars becomes a battle between science and self-interest when a privately held corporation makes its home on the Red Planet. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe ➡ Watch all clips of MARS here:...
Instructional Video1:18
Epic Reads

REMADE | Explained With Creator Matthew Cody

6th - 11th
You live. You love. You die. Welcome to ReMade, the epic serial story, as it’s explained by creator Matthew Cody. Subscribe to Epic Reads: http://goo.gl/2vD4rM The lives of twenty-three teenagers are forever changed, and it's not just...
Instructional Video4:47
Curated Video

What Would Happen If Humans Tried To Land On Jupiter

3rd - 11th
The best way to explore a new world is to land on it. That's why humans have sent spacecraft to the Moon, Venus, Mars, Saturn's moon, Titan, and more. But there are a few places in the solar system we will never understand as well as...
Instructional Video4:39
Curated Video

Iridium and the Dinosaurs

3rd - 11th
The iridium anomaly. 550 metres beneath the Earth's surface there exists a thin layer of space rock. Often taken as evidence of an extraterrestrial impact event resulting in the extinction of the dinosaurs, along with about 70% of all...