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How Rollercoasters Affect Your Body

YouthScienceTechnologyHealth
Brian D. Avery investigates what rollercoasters are doing to your body and how they’ve managed to get scarier and safer at the same time.

NASA Surprises Students

KidsScienceSpaceTechnology...
Watch the reactions of a group of students who had the opportunity of a lifetime to view the Artemis I Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft.

3D Printing With Drones

YouthFutureGadgetsScience...
Researchers have mounted 3D printers onto drones with the aim of creating swarms of robots that could 3D print entire buildings.

Meet the Animals of Pokémon!

KidsAnimalsTechnologyCulture...
How does Pokémon evolution work? Does Pikachu really exist? Where did Charmander come from?

Smart Chain Mail

YouthCreativityTechnologyScience
Researchers have developed a new kind of material with adjustable and reversible properties.

Have You Ever Seen An Atom?

YouthPhysicsScienceTechnology
Scientists at the University of California Los Angeles have found a way to create stunningly detailed 3D reconstructing of platinum nanoparticles at an atomic scale.

Could a solar storm destroy modern civilization? - Fabio Pacucci

AdultsEducationScienceSpace...
Explore the science of solar storms, and find out why they occur and just how prepared we are for a major event.

History Of The Internet

YouthHistoryTechnology
The internet is one of the most important tools in recent history, giving us access to countless amounts of information.

This MIT Engineer Built His Own Bionic Leg

YouthHistoryTechnologyBiotechnology...
At MIT's Media Lab, researchers are developing prosthetic limbs that users can control with their minds, making a robotic foot move as seamlessly as a biological one.

Japan's $100 Billion World's Fastest Train

YouthHistoryTechnologyTransportation...
Japan’s world record breaking Maglev L0 passenger train has been under testing since it was unveiled to the press in November of 2012, achieving speeds of 374 miles per hour.

Robotic Fibers

YouthHistoryTechnologyEngineering
A new kind of fiber developed by researchers at MIT and in Sweden.

2-Minute Time Machine - Beards

YouthHistoryTechnologyCulture...
We'll check out what's up with beards and why men (and women!) might have wanted one.

Making Manuscripts

KidsHistoryTechnologyArt
Illuminated manuscripts were among the most precious objects produced in the Middle Ages and the early Renaissance, primarily in monasteries and courts.

How Do LEDs And Batteries Work?

YouthScienceTechnology
How does electricity even do stuff? How do all the LEDs around us work? How do batteries work?

2-Minute Time Machine - Bread

YouthHistoryTechnologyFood
Where did bread come from and when did humans start making it?

The First Cell Phone Call

YouthHistoryTechnology
When AT&T launched their cellular system for car phones, Dr. Martin "Marty" Cooper and his team at Motorola decided to build a truly wireless mobile phone, a handheld device that would truly free consumers to communicate on the go.

Deep Dive Dubai

YouthSpeakingConstructionTechnology...
Dubai's latest record-breaking construction project is really making waves.

Betty Reid Soskin Tour Of "Rosie The Riveter" Museum

YouthHistoryTechnologyCulture...
Betty Reid Soskin tkaes us on a short tour of the “Rosie the Riveter World War II Home Front National Historical Park” in Richmond, California.

2-Minute Time Machine - Writing

YouthHistoryTechnologyWriting...
How often do you use writing? Probably every day (yes, that includes texting). But how did humans start writing in the first place?

Atlas - Partners In Parkour

YouthScienceTechnologyArtificial Intelligence
In this video our humanoid robots demonstrate their whole-body athletics, maintaining its balance through a variety of rapidly changing, high-energy activities.

The Surprising History Of Electric Cars

YouthHistoryTechnologyTransportation
Can electric cars reclaim their place on the road? Discover how developments in battery technology are making these cars more efficient and powerful.