Instructional Video2:35
FuseSchool

Coal, Oil & Gas Hyrdocarbons

6th - Higher Ed
Learn the basics about coal, oil and gas hydrocarbons as part of the organic chemistry topic.
Instructional Video2:08
FUSION

Special relativity explained in under three minutes

9th - 11th
In November 1915, Albert Einstein completed his general theory of relativity and transformed the world of physics. This theory took Einstein’s earlier theory of special relativity, which applied only to objects in a constant state of...
Instructional Video5:15
MinutePhysics

General Relativity Explained in 7 Levels of Difficulty

12th - Higher Ed
This video covers the General theory of Relativity, developed by Albert Einstein, from basic simple levels (it's gravity, curved space) through to the concepts of how curved spacetime is represented by psuedo-Riemannian manifolds with...
Instructional Video6:03
MinutePhysics

Einstein and The Special Theory of Relativity

12th - Higher Ed
How Einstein (& others) discovered Special Relativity. Pi day (3.14) is Albert Einstein's Birthday! To celebrate, we'll explain 4 of his most groundbreaking papers from 1905, when he was just 26 years old.
Instructional Video15:15
Curated Video

Moving Faster Than The Speed Of Light? Special Relativity Velocity Addition Formula

6th - 11th
If train A is moving towards train B, and each train moves at 75% the speed of light (relative to the ground), will an observer on train A think that train B is moving at 150% the speed of light? But nothing moves faster than the speed...
Instructional Video4:35
Wonderscape

Einstein's Miracle Year: Groundbreaking Discoveries of 1905

K - 5th
This video delves into Albert Einstein's "miracle year" of 1905, when he published revolutionary papers that changed our understanding of light, atoms, and the universe. Learn about his theories on photons and quantum theory, his proof...
Instructional Video5:49
Professor Dave Explains

General Relativity: The Curvature of Spacetime

12th - Higher Ed
Relativity comes in different flavors, as it happens. We spent some time looking at special relativity, so now it's time for the general variety. This is all about the geometry of spacetime, which curves around massive objects. This was...
Instructional Video8:14
Curated Video

Time Dilation - Einstein's Theory Of Relativity Explained!

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Time dilation and Einstein’s theory of relativity go hand in hand. Albert Einstein is the most popular physicist, as he formulated the theory of relativity, which gave the Energy mass equivalence formula and is directly related to time...
Instructional Video3:35
Curated Video

Scientific Theory vs. Scientific Law

3rd - Higher Ed
“Scientific Theory vs. Scientific Law” will explain the difference between a scientific theory and a scientific law and the importance of the evolution of theory over time.
Instructional Video5:53
Global Health with Greg Martin

Causality. Why you shouldn't use Bradford Hill criteria!

Higher Ed
Determining causality isn't easy. Correlation doesn't mean causation. And yet where we see a strong correlation between an exposure and an outcome, we need to be able to determine if there is a cause and effect relationship. Public...
Instructional Video37:46
The Wall Street Journal

Sustainability for Smaller Companies

Higher Ed
Pressure is mounting to improve sustainability practices, but many organizations have limited resources. An expert from the Green Business Bureau offers insight into how smaller companies can still make progress.
Instructional Video1:43
World Science Festival

What is the essential breakthrough of special relativity?

6th - 11th
Watch our new installment of A Moment of Science with Brian Greene for a brief, informal overview of Einstein’s Special Theory of Relativity. Subscribe to our YouTube Channel for all the latest from WSF. Visit our Website:...
Instructional Video3:49
Curated Video

Can Light Escape a Black Hole?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Light is affected by black holes because of the theory of general relativity, which states that any massive object warps the spacetime around it. Since a photon travels by the shortest distance between two points, light appears to bend...
Instructional Video5:12
Curated Video

Einstein and special relativity

9th - 11th
For more like this subscribe to the Open University channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXsH4hSV_kEdAOsupMMm4Qw Free learning from The Open University http://www.open.ac.uk/openlearn/science-maths-technology --- This famous theory...
Instructional Video2:37
Mazz Media

Lab Safety: Prepare and Observe a Microscope Slide

6th - 8th
In this live-action program viewers will learn how to prepare a microscope slide properly. Students will come to understand that when making scientific observations, your methods and observations must be clear to other scientists, so it...
Instructional Video4:39
World Science Festival

Time Dilation: Moving Clocks Tick Slower

6th - 11th
One of the outcomes of Einstein’s theory of special relativity is time dilation, a term used to describe how time is different for clocks moving along different paths through spacetime. Physicist Vijay Balasubramanian explains this idea...
Instructional Video12:33
PBS

Is Time Travel Impossible?

12th - Higher Ed
Time travel stories are cool because both the past and future are somehow more interesting that the present and because everyone wants a redo. But so far it appears we’re doomed to live consumed by regret in the eternal, boring present....
Instructional Video13:49
PBS

Loop Quantum Gravity Explained

12th - Higher Ed
The holy grail of physics is to connect our understanding of the tiny scales of atoms and subatomic particles with that of the vast scales of planets, galaxies, and the entire universe. To connect quantum physics with Einstein’s general...
Instructional Video12:40
PBS

Is The Future Predetermined By Quantum Mechanics?

12th - Higher Ed
Einstein’s special theory of relativity combines space and time into one dynamic, unified entity - spacetime. But if time is connected to space, could the universe be anything but deterministic? And does that mean that the future is...
Instructional Video12:36
PBS

Why the Muon g-2 Results Are So Exciting!

12th - Higher Ed
When a theory makes a prediction that disagrees with an experimental test, sometimes it means we should throw the theory away. But what if that theory has otherwise produced the most successful predictions in all of physics? Then, that...
Instructional Video14:41
PBS

The Holographic Universe Explained

12th - Higher Ed
The holographic principle emerged from many subtle clues – clues discovered over decades of theoretical exploration of the universe. Over the past several months on Space Time, we’ve seen those close clues, and we’ve built a the...
Instructional Video13:32
PBS

Is The Wave Function The Building Block of Reality?

12th - Higher Ed
Objective Collapse Theories offer a explanation of quantum mechanics that is at once brand new and based in classical mechanics. In the world of quantum mechanics, it’s no big deal for particles to be in multiple different states at the...
Instructional Video14:08
PBS

Are Black Holes Actually Fuzzballs?

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are a paradox. They are paradoxical because they simultaneously must exist but can’t, and so they break physics as we know it. Many physicists will tell you that the best way to fix broken physics is with string. String...
Instructional Video14:15
PBS

How To Simulate The Universe With DFT

12th - Higher Ed
If you used every particle in the observable universe to do a full quantum simulation, how big would that simulation be? At best a large molecule. That’s how insanely information dense the quantum wavefunction really is. And yet we...

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