Advertisement
Home / Series / Veritasium / Aired Order /

All Seasons

Season 2010

Season 2011

  • S2011E01 Atomic Theory

    • January 7, 2011
    • YouTube

    This is the first Veritasium science video. It addresses one of the most fundamental concepts in science: the idea that all things are made of atoms, tiny particles that are in perpetual motion. They attract each other when a little distance apart and repel when squeezed together.

  • S2011E02 Thomson's Plum Pudding Model of the Atom

    • January 27, 2011
    • YouTube

    JJ Thomson proposed the first model of the atom with subatomic structure. He had performed a series of experiments and was credited with the discovery of the first sub-atomic particle, the electron. He therefore proposed a new model of the atom called the plum pudding model. In this model, the plums represent negatively charged electrons which can be plucked out of the atom, leaving behind some positively charged pudding. In this film, cherry tart is used as a delicious substitute for plum pudding.

  • S2011E03 Cathode Rays Lead to Thomson's Model of the Atom

    • February 1, 2011
    • YouTube

    In the mid 1800's scientists successfully passed an electric current through a vacuum in a glass tube. They saw a glow from the tube that seemed to emanate from the negatively charged plate called the cathode. Since scientists didn't know what the glow was they called it a cathode ray. There was debate over whether the cathode ray was a wave phenomenon like light or a stream of negatively charged particles. JJ Thomson effectively resolved the debate in 1897 by performing a clever experiment that determined the charge to mass ratio of the particles making up the cathode ray. He also showed that this same particle was in all different cathode materials so it must be a constituent common to all atoms. This changed our understanding of the atom from the previous billiard ball model to Thomson's plum pudding model of the atom.

  • S2011E04 Scientific Notation - Explained!

    • February 2, 2011
    • YouTube

    Scientists have to work with some very large and some very small numbers. To represent these numbers more easily, they use scientific notation. Scientific notation relies on powers of 10. This video gives examples of how to represent a large and small number and explains powers of ten.

  • S2011E05 I'm Atoms (Scientific Cover of Jason Mraz's I'm Yours)

    • February 2, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E06 Scientific Notation - Example

    • February 3, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E07 The Difference Between Mass and Weight

    • February 7, 2011
    • YouTube

    There is a common perception that weight and mass are basically the same thing. This video aims to tease out the difference between mass and weight by asking people what makes a car difficult to push. The standard answer is that it is difficult to push because it's heavy. But heaviness is a measure of weight, the gravitational pull of the Earth attracting the car to Earth's center. When the car is pushed on a flat road, the force of gravity does not oppose the motion. Instead the resistance felt is an indication of the car's mass which determines its inertia. Inertia is the property of matter that means it tends to resist acceleration - the greater the mass, the less the acceleration for a given amount of force.

  • S2011E08 Egg Experiment to Demonstrate Inertia

    • February 9, 2011
    • YouTube

    If you spin a raw egg and then stop it, it will start spinning again without you having to touch it. A boiled egg, on the other hand, stops and stays stopped. Why is this? Well a raw egg contains a yolk that moves inside the egg independently of the shell. If you stop the shell, the yolk inside continues to move due to its inertia and it therefore gets the egg spinning again.

  • S2011E09 Gravity (Scientific Version of John Mayer's Gravity)

    • February 12, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E10 How Far Away is the Moon? (The Scale of the Universe)

    • February 17, 2011
    • YouTube

    If the Earth were the size of a basketball and the moon a tennis ball, how far apart would they be? Diagrams that are not to scale make us think that they're closer than they really are.

  • S2011E11 What is a Force?

    • February 17, 2011
    • YouTube

    Force is a central concept in physics. By analysing the forces on an object, its resulting motion can be determined. But what exactly is a force? The word force is used in everyday language in a variety of contexts, only some of which reflect the scientific definition of force. In this video, people at Victoria Park in Sydney are interviewed on their ideas of force and the forces that act on them.

  • S2011E12 What Forces Are Acting On You?

    • February 18, 2011
    • YouTube

    What forces (i.e. pushes or pulls) are acting on you right now? Most people can identify the gravitational force down, but there must be something else otherwise you would accelerate down towards the center of the Earth. The other main force on you is called the normal force. It is a force perpendicular to the surface that supports you, like the ground or the seat of your chair. You compress this surface and it acts like a spring, pushing you up.

  • S2011E13 Why Does the Moon Orbit Earth?

    • February 21, 2011
    • YouTube

    It takes the moon about 27 days to orbit the Earth. What makes it go round? It is the gravitational attraction of the Earth on the moon. Due to the moon's velocity, the Earth keeps pulling the moon towards it without the moon actually getting closer to the Earth. This is similar to how satellites orbit the Earth.

  • S2011E14 What Is Gravity?

    • February 22, 2011
    • YouTube

    People have a lot of different ideas about what gravity is: a downward force that stops you from flying off into space, an attraction smaller objects experience towards larger objects, or a mutual attraction between all masses. It is the last of these ideas that best reflects a scientific conception of gravity.

  • S2011E15 Best Film on Newton's Third Law. Ever.

    • February 25, 2011
    • YouTube

    There is a gravitational force of attraction between the Earth and the moon, but is it mutual? That is, are the forces on the Earth and the moon equal? Most people would say no, the Earth exerts a greater force of attraction because it is larger and has more mass. This is a situation in which Newton's Third Law is relevant. Newton's Third Law says that for every force, there is an equal and opposite reaction force. So the force the Earth exerts on the moon must be exactly equal and opposite the force the moon exerts on the Earth. But how can that be - that the same size force keeps the moon orbiting, but barely affects the Earth? The answer is inertia - the tendency for all objects with mass to maintain their state of motion. Since the Earth has much more mass than the moon, it has greater inertia and therefore experiences much less acceleration for the same amount of force.

  • S2011E16 Calculating Gravitational Attraction

    • February 27, 2011
    • YouTube

    Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation can be summarized as "all mass attracts all other mass." But if this is true, why don't we notice the gravitational force of attraction between everyday objects? The reason is because the gravitational force is quite weak.

  • S2011E17 Which Hits The Ground First?

    • March 1, 2011
    • YouTube

    A basketball and a 5kg medicine ball are dropped simultaneously. Which one hits the ground first? It seems obvious that the heavy one should accelerate at a greater rate and therefore land first because the force pulling it down is greater. But this is forgetting inertia - the tendency of mass to resist changes in motion. Therefore, although the force on the medicine ball is greater, it takes this larger force to accelerate the ball at the same rate as the basketball.

  • S2011E18 Misconceptions About Falling Objects

    • March 3, 2011
    • YouTube

    If you drop a heavy object and a light object simultaneously, which one will reach the ground first? A lot of people will say the heavy object, but what about those who know both will land at the same time? What do they think? Some believe both objects have the same gravitational pull on them and/or both fall to the ground with the same constant speed. Neither of these things is true, however. The force is greater on the heavy object and both objects accelerate at the same rate as they approach the earth, i.e. they both speed up but at the same rate.

  • S2011E19 Is There Gravity In Space?

    • March 8, 2011
    • YouTube

    If you've seen footage from the International Space Station or any of the space shuttle missions, you know that astronauts float around as they orbit the Earth. Why is that? Is it because the gravitational force on them is zero in space? (Or nearly zero?) The truth is that the strength of the gravitational attraction is only slightly less than it is on Earth's surface. So how are they able to float? Well, they aren't floating - they're falling, along with the space station. They don't crash into the Earth because they have a huge orbital velocity. So as they accelerate towards the Earth, the Earth curves away beneath them and they never get any closer. Since the astronauts have the same acceleration as the space station, they feel weightless. It's like being in a free-falling elevator (without the disastrous landing).

  • S2011E20 Three Incorrect Laws of Motion

    • March 10, 2011
    • YouTube

    Newton's Three Laws of Motion are a landmark achievement in physics. They describe how all objects move. Unfortunately most people do not really understand Newton's Laws because they have pre-existing ideas about the way the world works. This film is about those pre-existing ideas. By recognizing what people are thinking, it becomes easier to describe the correct scientific concepts of Newton's Three Laws and how they differ from this 'intuitive physics'.

  • S2011E21 Experiments A Cappella

    • March 14, 2011
    • YouTube

    A short a cappella tribute to experimentalists. It is sung while performing three simple experiments with household items: Mentos dropped in diet Coke, a tea bag emptied and burned, and a ping pong ball floating in the air stream of a hair dryer.

  • S2011E22 Khan Academy and the Effectiveness of Science Videos

    • March 17, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E23 What Are Atoms and Isotopes?

    • March 22, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E24 Supercooled Water - Explained!

    • March 22, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E25 How Damaging is Radiation?

    • March 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E26 What Powers Australia?

    • March 27, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E27 Galileo the Scientific Parrot

    • March 30, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E28 Radiation vs Radioactive Atoms

    • April 9, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E29 Sound + Fire = Rubens' Tube

    • April 12, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E30 Types of Radiation

    • April 29, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E31 What Is Electricity? (Are You Gonna Be My Girl?)

    • May 1, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E32 How Old Is The Earth?

    • May 8, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E33 Where Did The Earth Come From?

    • May 12, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E34 Veritasium Bungee Jumps!

    • May 18, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E35 When Is A Bungee Jumper's Acceleration Max?

    • May 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E36 Option A - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump

    • May 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E37 Option B - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump

    • May 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E38 Option C - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump

    • May 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E39 Option D - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump

    • May 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E40 Option E - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump

    • May 25, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E41 Can You Perceive Acceleration?

    • May 29, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E42 Can You Solve This Shadow Illusion

    • June 13, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E43 Misconceptions About Heat

    • June 29, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E44 Fire Syringe

    • July 10, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E45 Persistence Of Vision

    • July 16, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E46 Why Does The Earth Spin?

    • July 21, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E47 How Does The Earth Spin?

    • July 24, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E48 Why Is Ice Slippery?

    • August 4, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E49 Does Pressure Melt Ice?

    • August 13, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E50 Ice Cutting Experiment

    • August 20, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E51 Ice Cutting Experiment 2

    • August 21, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E52 What Is Chemistry?

    • August 22, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E53 What Is Water Made Of?

    • August 24, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E54 Impress Her With Nanodiamonds

    • August 27, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E55 Chain Drop Experiment

    • August 29, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E56 Chain Drop Answer 2

    • August 29, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E57 What Colour Is Most Attractive?

    • September 5, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E58 Imploding Drum

    • September 6, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E59 States of Matter

    • September 15, 2011
    • YouTube

    Everyone is familiar with liquid water, ice and water vapour, but what are the differences between these three states of matter? Solids, liquids and vapours of the same substance differ in the motion of the molecules and the distance between them.

  • S2011E60 Slinky Drop

    • September 21, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E61 Slinky Drop Answer

    • September 21, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E62 Slinky Drop Extended

    • September 21, 2011
    • YouTube

    The answer to the question - what happens to a tennis ball tied to the bottom of a slinky after the top of the slinky is let go?

  • S2011E63 Make Plasma With Grapes In The Microwave!

    • October 1, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E64 Supersized Slow-Mo Slinky Drop

    • October 10, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E65 Nobel Prize Winner Brian Schmidt - Physics 2011

    • October 16, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E66 Physics Nobel Prize 2011 - Brian Schmidt

    • October 23, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E67 Can You Go the Speed of Light?

    • November 1, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E68 Atomic Rant

    • November 10, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E69 What Is The Magnus Force?

    • November 24, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E70 A Human Being Is A Part Of The Whole

    • December 3, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E71 What Causes The Phases Of The Moon?

    • December 12, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E72 How To Make Graphene

    • December 19, 2011
    • YouTube

  • S2011E73 Candle Trick

    • December 30, 2011
    • YouTube

Season 2012

Season 2013

Season 2014

Season 2015

Season 2016

Season 2017

  • S2017E01 The Absurdity of Detecting Gravitational Waves

    • January 5, 2017
    • YouTube

    A head-vaporizing laser with a perfect wavelength detecting sub-proton space-time ripples.

  • S2017E02 The Real Moral Dilemma of Self-Driving Cars

    • January 19, 2017
    • YouTube

    We talk about all the potentially challenging situations autonomous cars could get into but not about how human drivers are not very good. Tens of thousands die on the roads every year in collisions, most of which could be prevented by autonomous vehicles. Sponsored by BMW I wanted to make a video about autonomous cars for some time but I hadn't had the opportunity. The self-driving technology is already at a state where it can save lives if only it were more widely implemented.

  • S2017E03 Electromagnetic Levitation Quadcopter

    • January 30, 2017
    • YouTube

    Spinning magnets near copper sheets create levitation!

  • S2017E04 3 Sources of Water on the Moon

    • February 8, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Water on the Moon? For a long time we thought the Moon was completely dry, but it turns out there are actually three sources of lunar water.

  • S2017E05 The Science of Thinking

    • March 2, 2017
    • YouTube

    How the brain works, how we learn, and why we sometimes make stupid mistakes.

  • S2017E06 Does Water Swirl the Other Way in the Southern Hemisphere?

    • March 20, 2017
    • YouTube

    The definitive answer about the direction water swirls in two hemispheres

  • S2017E07 How To Update Your Beliefs Systematically - Bayes’ Theorem

    • April 5, 2017
    • YouTube

    I didn't say it explicitly in the video, but in my view the Bayesian trap is interpreting events that happen repeatedly as events that happen inevitably. They may be inevitable OR they may simply be the outcome of a series of steps, which likely depend on our behaviour. Yet our expectation of a certain outcome often leads us to behave just as we always have which only ensures that outcome. To escape the Bayesian trap, we must be willing to experiment.

  • S2017E08 4 Revolutionary Riddles

    • April 12, 2017
    • YouTube

    Can you solve these four rotation-related riddles?

  • S2017E09 4 Revolutionary Riddles Resolved!

    • April 18, 2017
    • YouTube

    The solution to 4 rotation-related riddles, including the mystery cylinder, bike pedal pulling puzzle, track problem, and train part going backwards. Thank you to everyone who responded, liked, shared, or made a video response.

  • S2017E10 The Sun Sneeze Gene

    • April 27, 2017
    • YouTube

    I have the photic sneeze reflex so I sneeze when I look at bright light.

  • S2017E11 Fire in ZERO-G!!

    • May 3, 2017
    • YouTube

    In a zero-g plane I experimented with flames and slinkies with surprising results.

  • S2017E12 Is America Actually Metric?

    • May 10, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: The American Kilogram The US signed the metre convention and bases all customary units on SI standards. As an aside, the Utah constitution from 1895 required the metric system to be taught in schools. This requirement was repealed in 1987. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • S2017E13 Mars 2020: Nasa's Next Mission To Mars

    • May 18, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: The Next Mission to Mars: Mars 2020 In 2020, NASA will send a new rover to the Martian surface with one of its objectives to search for evidence of ancient life on the planet. I made this clip as a correspondent for Bill Nye Saves the World on Netflix.

  • S2017E14 World's Heaviest Weight

    • May 24, 2017
    • YouTube

    How do you measure big forces accurately? By calibrating your force transducer on the world's biggest weight - 1,000,000 pounds of force. This machine ensures planes don't break apart, jets provide required thrust, and rockets make it to their destination.

  • S2017E15 NEW Gravitational Wave Discovery!

    • June 1, 2017
    • YouTube

    Scientists have JUST published this new observation. On January 4th, 2017 they detected the merger of two black holes 3 billion light-years away. This marks the furthest detection they've been able to make and increases confidence that these events will be seen with increasing frequency as the LIGO interferometers become more sensitive to low amplitude gravitational waves (as sources of noise are eliminated).

  • S2017E16 Sandwich Bag Fire Starter

    • June 8, 2017
    • YouTube

    The intensity of sunlight on Earth is about 1300 Watts per square meter. When you focus the sun's rays using a magnifying glass (or in this case sphere of water) you can increase the intensity roughly ten thousand fold. This increases the temperature of wood to its autoignition point starting the reaction with oxygen in the atmosphere. By protecting the hot embers and adding more energy and fuel, you can get these hot coals to start a roaring fire.

  • S2017E17 How To See Air Currents

    • June 15, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Seeing the Invisible This is what the world would look like if you could see invisible air currents, temperature gradients, and differences in pressure or composition of the air.

  • S2017E18 Hydrodynamic Levitation!

    • June 26, 2017
    • YouTube

    On a stream of water you can levitate light balls of all sizes and even disks and cylinders. The mechanism is not the Bernoulli effect...

  • S2017E19 How We're Redefining the kg

    • July 12, 2017
    • YouTube

    In 2018 the kg will be defined by Planck's constant, not a hunk of metal.

  • S2017E20 Total Solar Eclipse (2017)

    • August 21, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: ECLIPSE 2017 The total solar eclipse from Madras, Oregon on August 21, 2017. As the moon passed in front of the sun turning day to night and revealing the sun's corona, apparently all I could think to say was 'Oh my goodness!'

  • S2017E21 Schlieren Imaging in Color!

    • September 30, 2017
    • YouTube

    How Schlieren imaging works in color, black and white and slow-mo.

  • S2017E22 Neutron Star Merger Gravitational Waves and Gamma Rays

    • October 16, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: First Ever Light & Gravitational Wave Cosmic Event! The merging of two neutron stars was detected by gravitational waves and then by telescopes in all parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. This is a historic detection as it demonstrates: - the first gravitational waves detected from inspiraling neutron stars - the first joint observation by gravitational wave and electromagnetic wave astronomy - identification of a gamma ray burst in conjunction with merging neutron stars - how gravitational waves and gamma rays can be used together to locate their source All evidence so far indicates that the data support General Relativity.

  • S2017E23 Your Body's Molecular Machines

    • November 20, 2017
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Your Amazing Molecular Machines These are the molecular machines inside your body that make cell division possible.

  • S2017E24 World's First Car!

    • November 23, 2017
    • YouTube

    I got to drive the world's first car (replica), patented by Benz in 1886

  • S2017E25 This Particle Breaks Time Symmetry

    • December 12, 2017
    • YouTube

    Increasing entropy is NOT the only process that's asymmetric in time.

Season 2018

  • S2018E01 Why Mosquitoes Bite Some People More Than Others

    • February 7, 2018
    • YouTube

    Mosquitoes are attracted to me and it's likely due to my genes.

  • S2018E02 The Threat of AI Weapons

    • April 2, 2018
    • YouTube

    Will artificial intelligence weapons cause World War III?

  • S2018E03 Why Einstein Thought Nuclear Weapons Impossible

    • April 30, 2018
    • YouTube

    How Neutrons Changed Everything Without neutrons, harnessing nuclear energy would be impossible.

  • S2018E04 My Life Story

    • June 18, 2018
    • YouTube

    Original Title: The Truth About Veritasium The truth, with photons. I hope I've articulated everything clearly in this video. If not, I'll clarify in comments. Thanks to everyone who appears in this video and thanks to everyone who watches this video! Veritasium is of course a combination of the latin 'veritas' meaning truth, and the common element ending 'ium'. I guess this is my version of the 'draw my life' craze that rolled through YouTube many years ago. Except I wanted to tell my story with the actual moments, the photons, the stored magnetic states. There's something about that which is so important to me (because I think the alternative involves fooling yourself) which is why I'm so fascinated by film and video.

  • S2018E05 Spinning Sphere of Molten Sodium

    • July 14, 2018
    • YouTube

    An experiment on how turbulent convection in Earth's core makes a magnetic field.

  • S2018E06 The World in UV

    • July 21, 2018
    • YouTube

    UV cameras expose a hidden world and reveal the incompleteness of our perception

  • S2018E07 Can You Overdose on Vitamins?

    • August 13, 2018
    • YouTube

    Vitamins are 13 molecules essential for life that our bodies can't make themselves.

  • S2018E08 Is Our Food Becoming Less Nutritious?

    • August 24, 2018
    • YouTube

    The nutrient content of food is declining. Is it because of soil depletion, selective breeding, or... something else?

  • S2018E09 How UV Causes Cancer and Aging

    • September 4, 2018
    • YouTube

    UV at ground level is non-ionizing but it damages DNA and causes photoaging - how? Also, it turns out glass doesn't block all UV (specifically UVA passes through). This is something I learned filming with the UV camera inside.

  • S2018E10 This Toy Can Open Any Garage

    • September 19, 2018
    • YouTube

    Or almost any garage - it's particularly good with fixed code gates and garages. Samy proposes other weaknesses with rolling codes.

  • S2018E11 Why Boredom is Good For You

    • September 29, 2018
    • YouTube

    Original Title: The Scientific Benefits of Boredom Boredom makes you more creative, altruistic, introspective, and helps with autobiographical planning.

  • S2018E12 What Actually Causes Dandruff?

    • October 24, 2018
    • YouTube

    Original Title: The Fungus on Your Head This fungus lives on your scalp and may affect the genes you express.

  • S2018E13 Drinking in ZERO-G! (and other challenges of a trip to Mars)

    • November 2, 2018
    • YouTube

    Original Title: ZERO-G Challenges of a Trip to Mars!

  • S2018E14 The kg is dead, long live the kg

    • November 15, 2018
    • YouTube

    Will this be the last video I make about SI units? Quite possibly. There's something about being so precise and defining the systems within which science works. When we can more accurately and routinely measure a kilogram, a mole, a kelvin and an ampere, then we can make better observations, we can better detect anomalies and improve our theories. That is why this is so important to me.

  • S2018E15 Five Firsts for Mars InSight

    • November 26, 2018
    • YouTube

    Mars InSight will be the first to detect seismic activity on Mars’ surface, first to measure rate of heat transmitted from interior, first to dig nearly 5m down, first to measure magnetic fields on Mars’ surface, and first to use a robotic arm to place instruments on the surface of Mars (assuming it lands of course…)

  • S2018E16 How Ultrasound Can Deactivate Parts of the Brain

    • December 10, 2018
    • YouTube

    Original Title: Non-Invasive Brain Surgery Scientists have combined ultrasound, viruses and synthetic drugs to control regions of the brain.

  • S2018E17 The Best Test of General Relativity (by 2 Misplaced Satellites)

    • December 23, 2018
    • YouTube

    A launch mishap led to the best experimental confirmation of gravitational redshift.

Season 2019

  • S2019E01 Spinning Black Holes

    • January 11, 2019
    • YouTube

    A pulsing black hole in the centre of a distant galaxy sheds light on black hole and galaxy formation. How fast are black holes rotating and how does that rotation change over its life-span?

  • S2019E02 The Inverse Leidenfrost Effect

    • January 25, 2019
    • YouTube

    Droplets levitate on a bath of liquid nitrogen and are spontaneously self-propelled.

  • S2019E03 Do Salt Lamps Work

    • February 6, 2019
    • YouTube

    Do negative air ions improve mood, anxiety, depression, alertness?

  • S2019E04 Microwaving Grapes Makes Plasma

    • February 18, 2019
    • YouTube

    A bisected grape in the microwave makes plasma. But how does it work? A grape is the right size and refractive index to trap microwaves inside it. When you place two (or two halves) close together the fields interact with each other creating a maximum of electromagnetic energy where they touch. This creates heating, sparks, and plasma, which is further fed with energy directly by the microwaves.

  • S2019E05 Can You Recover Sound From Images?

    • March 1, 2019
    • YouTube

    Is it possible to reconstruct sound from high-speed video images?

  • S2019E06 Why Machines That Bend Are Better

    • March 12, 2019
    • YouTube

    Compliant mechanisms have lots of advantages over traditional devices. SimpliSafe is awesome security. It's really effective, easy to use, and the price is great.

  • S2019E07 Can Humans Sense Magnetic Fields?

    • March 18, 2019
    • YouTube

    Research has found human brains can pick up on rotations of geomagnetic-strength fields as evidenced by drops in alpha wave power following stimulus.

  • S2019E08 How Was Video Invented

    • March 29, 2019
    • YouTube

    I always wanted to know why film looked better than video. Moving electronic images have as long a history but were invented for a different purpose.

  • S2019E09 How to Understand the Black Hole Image

    • April 9, 2019
    • YouTube

    We are about to see the first image of a black hole, the supermassive black hole Sagittarius A* at the center of the Milky Way galaxy. But what is that image really showing us?

  • S2019E10 First Image of a Black Hole!

    • April 10, 2019
    • YouTube

    The Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration observed the supermassive black holes at the center of M87 and our Milky Way galaxy (SgrA*) finding the dark central shadow in accordance with General Relativity, further demonstrating the power of this 100 year-old theory.

  • S2019E11 Three Awesome High School Science Projects

    • April 19, 2019
    • YouTube

    The story of three impressive high school science projects. Can you guess which student won $250,000 in the #RegeneronSTS?

  • S2019E12 Magnetic Micro-Robots

    • April 25, 2019
    • YouTube

    Tiny robots activated by magnetic fields may be used in future biomedical procedures.

  • S2019E13 Why Are 96,000,000 Black Balls on This Reservoir?

    • May 10, 2019
    • YouTube

    I took a boat through 96 million black plastic balls on the Los Angeles reservoir to find out why they're there. The first time I heard about shade balls the claim was they reduce evaporation. But it turns out this isn't the reason they were introduced.

  • S2019E14 My Video Went Viral. Here's Why

    • May 19, 2019
    • YouTube

    My hypothesis is that the algorithm, rather than viewer preference, drives views on the site. As the algorithm shifts, various YouTubers experience burnout (as what used to work no longer works) and right now click-through rate is the key metric. So clickable titles and thumbnails are the only way to get a lot of impressions and hence views - they are the only way to go viral. This leads me to wonder which audiences will become most prevalent on the site and if there will even be a place for educational content. In the long-term, hopefully YouTube is able to measure satisfaction through surveys and other metrics to ensure an optimal experience for everyone on the site.

  • S2019E15 World's Lightest Solid!

    • May 31, 2019
    • YouTube

    Aerogels are the world's lightest (least dense) solids. They are also excellent thermal insulators and have been used in numerous Mars missions and the Stardust comet particle-return mission. The focus of this video is silica aerogels, though graphene aerogels are now technically the lightest.

  • S2019E16 Can You Swim in Shade Balls?

    • June 13, 2019
    • YouTube

    I bought 10,000 shade balls and tried to swim in them. They appear to act like a non-Newtonian fluid: rigid under high shear stress, but they flow like a liquid under low shear.

  • S2019E17 I Waterproofed Myself With Aerogel!

    • June 21, 2019
    • YouTube

    Aerogel has extraordinary properties but it can be tough to work with. This video looks at modifying aerogels to take advantage of their unique characteristics.

  • S2019E18 How Cod Saved the Vikings

    • July 7, 2019
    • YouTube

    The Vikings suffered many hardships living in the north of Europe: long, cold winters and importantly a lack of sunlight. Luckily, they had cod.

  • S2019E19 Why Apollo Astronauts Trained in Nuclear Bomb Craters

    • July 19, 2019
    • YouTube

    Apollo astronauts trained in nuclear bomb craters at the Nevada National Security Site. But why?

  • S2019E20 Why the Future of Cars is Electric

    • August 2, 2019
    • YouTube

    Electric cars are now ready to take over thanks to advances in battery technology and their inherent benefits: torque, handling, maintenance.

  • S2019E21 Mars Helicopter (before it went to Mars)

    • August 10, 2019
    • YouTube

    The Mars Helicopter aims to make the first powered flight on another planet when it takes off on Mars as part of the Mars 2020 mission. I learned a lot getting to visit the drone right before it was mounted on the rover.

  • S2019E22 Making Liquid Nitrogen From Scratch!

    • August 16, 2019
    • YouTube

    I used a nitrogen membrane and Stirling cryocooler to liquefy nitrogen out of the air.

  • S2019E23 Flamethrower vs Aerogel

    • August 31, 2019
    • YouTube

    We put aerogel to the test vs 'not-a-flamethrower', a huge 2000°C flame to a large fiberglass blanket infused with silica aerogel - formerly the lightest solid (that title is now held by graphene aerogel).

  • S2019E24 Does Planet 9 Exist?

    • September 13, 2019
    • YouTube

    A planet has been predicted to orbit the sun with a period of 10,000 years, a mass 5x that of Earth on a highly elliptical and inclined orbit. What evidence supports the existence of such a strange object at the edge of our solar system?

  • S2019E25 The Bizarre Behavior of Rotating Bodies, Explained

    • September 19, 2019
    • YouTube

    Spinning objects have strange instabilities known as The Dzhanibekov Effect or Tennis Racket Theorem - this video offers an intuitive explanation.

  • S2019E26 Engineering with Origami

    • October 4, 2019
    • YouTube

    On first glance it's surprising that origami -- a centuries old art of folding paper to achieve particular aesthetics -- is applicable to engineering. But upon closer consideration there are a lot of reasons methods developed for paper folding are also applicable to engineering: origami allows you to take a flat sheet of material and convert it to almost any shape only by folding. Plus for large flat structures, origami provides a way of shrinking dimensions while ensuring simply deployment - this is particularly useful for solar arrays in space applications. Furthermore, motions designed to take advantage of the flexibility of paper can also be used to form compliant mechanisms for engineering like the kaleidocycle. Since the principles of origami are scalable, mechanisms can also be dramatically miniaturized.

  • S2019E27 Why Trees Are Out to Get You

    • October 25, 2019
    • YouTube

    Huge thanks to all the YouTubers who organized this. My apologies for the repost. These videos are from 2012 so my interest in trees goes back a long ways. I think these videos discuss two of the most interesting and amazing facts about our leafy friends: they are made mostly of CO2 (which comes from us breathing out amongst other sources) and they can transport water up a tube higher than any we can currently manufacture. So trees are out to get you. But we do much worse to them so we owe it to them to plant some more. 20 mil is a good start.

  • S2019E28 3 Perplexing Physics Problems

    • November 20, 2019
    • YouTube

    Why does shaken soda explode? Does ice melt first in fresh or salt water?

  • S2019E29 Chaos - The Science of the Butterfly Effect

    • December 6, 2019
    • YouTube

    Chaos theory means deterministic systems can be unpredictable.

  • S2019E30 How to Slow Aging (and even reverse it)

    • December 14, 2019
    • YouTube

    Scientists like Prof Sinclair have evidence of speeding up, slowing, and even reversing aging.

  • S2019E31 Why New Years Resolutions Fail & How To Succeed

    • December 28, 2019
    • YouTube

    Common pitfalls of New Year's resolutions and how I plan to avoid them.

Season 2020

Season 2021

  • S2021E01 These Pools Help Support Half The People On Earth

    • January 27, 2021
    • YouTube

    What are these electric blue ponds in the middle of the Utah desert? And why do they keep changing color?

  • S2021E02 I Asked Bill Gates What's The Next Crisis?

    • February 4, 2021
    • YouTube

    got the chance to interview Bill Gates so I asked him: Will Covid-19 be the last pandemic? How does he deal with misinformation and conspiracy theories? And what is the next disaster?

  • S2021E03 Why Robots That Bend Are Better

    • February 18, 2021
    • YouTube

    On Thursday February 18th, 2021 the NASA Perseverance Rover will land on Mars. It is a wonderful robot, made out of steel and wire — but will future robots look like Perseverance? There is an emerging field of research on "soft robots", where the machines are flexible. These soft robots have many advantages over traditional robots — they're safer, lighter, more flexible and can change their shape and size.

  • S2021E04 The Discovery That Transformed Pi

    • March 16, 2021
    • YouTube

    For thousands of years, mathematicians were calculating Pi the obvious but numerically inefficient way. Then Newton came along and changed the game.

  • S2021E05 This is why we can't have nice things

    • March 26, 2021
    • YouTube

    This video is about stuff: light bulbs, printers, phones and why they aren't better.

  • S2021E06 The Surprising Secret of Synchronization

    • March 31, 2021
    • YouTube

    How does order spontaneously arise out of chaos?

  • S2021E07 This Unstoppable Robot Could Save Your Life

    • April 16, 2021
    • YouTube

    This robot has applications to archaeology, space exploration, and search and rescue — with a simple elegant design inspired by a plant.

  • S2021E08 How An Infinite Hotel Ran Out Of Room

    • May 10, 2021
    • YouTube

    If there's a hotel with infinite rooms, could it ever be completely full? Could you run out of space to put everyone? The surprising answer is yes -- this is important to know if you're the manager of the Hilbert Hotel.

  • S2021E09 Math Has a Fatal Flaw

    • May 22, 2021
    • YouTube

    Not everything that is true can be proven. This discovery transformed infinity, changed the course of a world war and led to the modern computer

  • S2021E10 Risking My Life To Settle A Physics Debate

    • May 29, 2021
    • YouTube

    Everyone will say this craft breaks the laws of physics.

  • S2021E11 The Longest-Running Evolution Experiment

    • June 16, 2021
    • YouTube

    If you ran evolution all over again, would you get humans? How repeatable is #evolution?

  • S2021E12 A Physics Prof Bet Me $10,000 I'm Wrong

    • June 30, 2021
    • YouTube

    A UCLA Physics Professor bet me $10,000 that my video about going downwind faster than the wind was wrong.

  • S2021E13 The Biggest Myth In Education

    • July 9, 2021
    • YouTube

    You are not a visual learner — learning styles are a stubborn myth.

  • S2021E14 Why You Should Want Driverless Cars On Roads Now

    • July 23, 2021
    • YouTube

    How close are we to having fully autonomous vehicles on the roads? Are they safe? In Chandler, Arizona a fleet of Waymo vehicles are already in operation.

  • S2021E15 The Simplest Math Problem No One Can Solve

    • July 30, 2021
    • YouTube

    The Collatz Conjecture is the simplest math problem no one can solve — it is easy enough for almost anyone to understand but notoriously difficult to solve.

  • S2021E16 The Genius of 3D Printed Rockets

    • August 12, 2021
    • YouTube

    3D printed rockets save on up front tooling, enable rapid iteration, decrease part count, and facilitate radically new designs.

  • S2021E17 Clickbait is Unreasonably Effective

    • August 17, 2021
    • YouTube

    Original Title: We Need To Talk About Clickbait The title and thumbnail play a huge role in a video's success or failure.

  • S2021E18 The Universe is Hostile to Computers

    • August 31, 2021
    • YouTube

    Original Title: How Distant Stars ACTUALLY Affect Our Lives Tiny particles from distant galaxies have caused plane accidents, election interference and game glitches.

  • S2021E19 Why All Scorpions Are Fluorescent

    • September 3, 2021
    • YouTube

    Under UV light, almost all species of scorpions glow a bright green color, but why?

  • S2021E20 How Hidden Technology Transformed Bowling

    • September 25, 2021
    • YouTube

    Bowling has been reinvented many times over the past seven thousand years but especially in the last 30. This is the fascinating physics of balls, oil, lane and pins.

  • S2021E21 How They Caught The Golden State Killer

    • September 30, 2021
    • YouTube

    Your genetic code is probably already in a database, without you ever giving a sample or permission.

  • S2021E22 This Robot Walks, Flies, Skateboards, Slacklines

    • October 16, 2021
    • YouTube

    This is a #robot that walks, flies, #skateboards, #slacklines, and might do much more one day.

  • S2021E23 I Rented A Helicopter To Settle A Physics Debate

    • October 27, 2021
    • YouTube

    The story of a controversial physics question on the qualifying exam for the 2014 US Physics Olympiad team. How does a uniform cable beneath a helicopter hang?

  • S2021E24 How Imaginary Numbers Were Invented

    • November 1, 2021
    • YouTube

    A general solution to the cubic equation was long considered impossible, until we gave up the requirement that math reflect reality.

  • S2021E25 The Big Misconception About Electricity

    • November 19, 2021
    • YouTube

    The misconception is that electrons carry potential energy around a complete conducting loop, transferring their energy to the load.

  • S2021E26 Most People Don't Know How Bikes Work

    • November 28, 2021
    • YouTube

    Why are bicycles stable? The most common answer is gyroscopic effects, but this is not right.

  • S2021E27 The Snowflake Mystery

    • December 1, 2021
    • YouTube

    Dr Ken Libbrecht is the world expert on snowflakes, designer of custom snowflakes, snowflake consultant for the movie Frozen - his photos appear on postage stamps all over the world.

  • S2021E28 The Most Powerful Computers You've Never Heard Of

    • December 21, 2021
    • YouTube

    Analog computers were the most powerful computers for thousands of years, relegated to obscurity by the digital revolution.

Season 2022

Season 2023

Season 2024

Additional Specials