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Season 2011

  • S2011E01 What is Gravity?

    • June 26, 2011
    • YouTube

    One Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in one minute! In this episode, we discuss the basic nature of gravity, one of the four fundamental forces in our universe.

  • S2011E02 What is Dark Matter?

    • July 6, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode, we discuss Dark Matter, an exotic type of matter we know very little about, despite the fact that it makes up around 80% of all matter in the universe!

  • S2011E03 What is the Wave/Particle Duality? Part 1

    • July 10, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode, we discuss the Wave Particle Duality and why quantum mechanics is weirder than anything we're used to in our daily lives!

  • S2011E04 The Wave/Particle Duality - Part 2

    • July 16, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode, I revisit the wave particle duality and present an intuitive analogy for understanding how it works. Plus, new music by Nathaniel Schroeder!

  • S2011E05 How the Sun Works: Fusion and Quantum Tunneling

    • July 25, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode, we learn about how the sun can burn for billions of years without running out of fuel.

  • S2011E06 What is the Uncertainty Principle?

    • July 31, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode, we talk about the Heisenberg uncertainty principle and how it's not really that weird - it's just a property of waves!

  • S2011E07 What is the Sound of Hydrogen?

    • August 7, 2011
    • YouTube

    This episode is a little bit different from the norm, because I've created the sound of hydrogen - or, that is, what if it would sound like if it emitted sound instead of light waves!

  • S2011E08 What is Quantum Tunneling?

    • August 14, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode we explain what quantum tunneling is and how it works!

  • S2011E09 Adding Past Infinity (WARNING: Math Ahead)

    • August 21, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode we take a break from physics and do a little fuzzy math. But not really: this is actually relevant to physics! Come back and I'll explain later.

  • S2011E10 Tutorial: creating the sound of hydrogen

    • August 24, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this tutorial I show how I synthesized the sound of hydrogen for the "Sound of Hydrogen" video (S2011E07) using mathematica - it's a little technical, but you've been requesting it!

  • S2011E11 What is a dimension? In 3D...and 2D... and 1D

    • August 29, 2011
    • YouTube

    In this episode we talk about dimensions and how we know that we live in 3D (or do we?).

  • S2011E12 Distance and Special Relativity: How far away is tomorrow?

    • September 4, 2011
    • YouTube

    Time is shorter than you think! In this episode we talk about distance in space and time and answer "How far away is tomorrow?"

  • S2011E13 What is fire?

    • September 11, 2011
    • YouTube

    Fire it up! We explain hot stuff. In this episode we explain why fire is red, gas flames are blue, and why you're too cool to glow.

  • S2011E14 Taming Infinity

    • September 19, 2011
    • YouTube

    How does physics deal with infinity? In this episode we explain how physicists can tease information out of infinity.

  • S2011E15 Schrödinger's Cat

    • September 26, 2011
    • YouTube

    No cats were harmed in the making of this video. In this episode we discuss Schrödinger's cat, quantum entanglement, and our perception of reality.

  • S2011E16 2011 Nobel Prize: Dark Energy feat. Sean Carroll

    • October 5, 2011
    • YouTube

    Guest narrator Sean Carroll of Caltech describes dark energy and the acceleration of the universe, the discovery of which was awarded the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics on October 4th.

  • S2011E17 There is no pink light

    • October 16, 2011
    • YouTube

    Pink doesn't exist!

  • S2011E18 The Speed of Light in Glass

    • October 23, 2011
    • YouTube

    How does light speed up after leaving glass or water? What do light and the President of the United States have in common?

  • S2011E19 How to break the speed of light

    • October 30, 2011
    • YouTube

    You can break the speed of light in your back yard! (but don't worry, Einstein is still right)

  • S2011E20 GPS, relativity, and nuclear detection

    • November 7, 2011
    • YouTube

    GPS is just a big clock in space! (and it can detect nuclear explosions)

  • S2011E21 The Arrow of Time feat. Sean Carroll

    • November 13, 2011
    • YouTube

    Why is the past different from the future? Caltech physicist Sean Carroll explains how the arrow of time is not an intrinsic property of physics, but rather an emergent feature.

  • S2011E22 Weigh a million dollars with your mind

    • November 20, 2011
    • YouTube

    A million dollars is a ton of money. But how much does it weigh?

  • S2011E23 The Hairy Ball Theorem

    • November 27, 2011
    • YouTube

    Ever tried to comb a hairy ball? Math says you failed!

  • S2011E24 How lasers work (in theory)

    • December 4, 2011
    • YouTube

    How does a laser really work? It's Bose - Einstein statistics! (photons are bosons)

  • S2011E25 The Tacoma Narrows Fallacy

    • December 11, 2011
    • YouTube

    Teach your teacher: the collapse of the Tacoma Narrows bridge WASN'T resonance. And I defer all arguments to the elocution of Profs. Billah and Scanlon: http://www.ketchum.org/billah/Billah-Scanlan.pdf

  • S2011E26 What is a Neutrino?

    • December 18, 2011
    • YouTube

    Neutrinos are the vampires of physics.

  • S2011E27 Faster Than Light Neutrinos (maybe): Field Trip!

    • December 29, 2011
    • YouTube

    Come with us to Italy to find out what went into measuring the FTL neutrinos.

Season 2012

Season 2013

  • S2013E01 Another Physics Misconception

    • January 3, 2013
    • YouTube

    Why p=mv is not completely true.

  • S2013E02 Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins?

    • January 25, 2013
    • YouTube

    The Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny

  • S2013E03 The BEST Science Online (Henry's List)

    • February 7, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry's incomplete list of the best science sites Big Red Button - http://inception.davepedu.com xkcd - http://xkcd.com/1131/ xkcd what if? - http://what-if.xkcd.com/3/ Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal - http://www.smbc-comics.com/index.php?db=comics&id=2867 Empirical Zeal - http://www.empiricalzeal.com/ Sean Carroll - http://www.preposterousuniverse.com/b... Terry Tao - http://terrytao.wordpress.com/ It's Okay To Be Smart - http://www.itsokaytobesmart.com/ I ¶#@*ing Love Science - https://www.facebook.com/IFeakingLove... NASA Astronomy Picture of the Day - http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/astropix.html Radiolab - http://www.radiolab.org HyperPhysics - http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/ The Scale of the Universe - http://htwins.net/scale2/ The Character of Physical Law - http://research.microsoft.com/apps/tools/tuva/ Fake Science - http://fakescience.tumblr.com/ Youtube Channels Veritasium - http://www.youtube.com/user/1veritasium Sixty Symbols - http://www.sixtysymbols.com/ Periodic Videos - http://www.periodicvideos.com/ Crash Course - http://www.youtube.com/user/crashcourse The Brain Scoop - http://www.youtube.com/thebrainscoop Smarter Every Day - http://www.youtube.com/destinws2 Vi Hart - http://www.youtube.com/vihart George Hart - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTl0... Numberphile - http://www.numberphile.com/ Vsauce - http://www.youtube.com/user/Vsauce TED-Ed - http://www.youtube.com/teded MinuteEarth - http://www.youtube.com/user/minuteearth

  • S2013E04 What Is The Universe?

    • February 16, 2013
    • YouTube

    It's everything or just some things.. Time to get specific.

  • S2013E05 How Big is the Universe?

    • February 25, 2013
    • YouTube

    It has NO EDGE. And NO CENTER... or does it?

  • S2013E06 YouTube Video vs. The Universe

    • March 11, 2013
    • YouTube

  • S2013E07 The True Science of Parallel Universes

    • April 2, 2013
    • YouTube

    Science explaining the science behind the possibility of Parallel Universes.

  • S2013E08 Parallel Universes: Many Worlds

    • April 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    More Theories on Parallel Universes. This time? Many Worlds Theory.

  • SPECIAL 0x10 NEW SHOW: MinuteEarth

    • April 29, 2013
    • YouTube

    Promo for new channel MinuteEarth MinuteEarth: http://youtube.com/minuteearth MinutoDeFisica: http://youtube.com/minutodefisica MinutoDeLaTierra: http://youtube.com/minutodelatierra

  • S2013E09 Foiled Proof

    • May 4, 2013
    • YouTube

    Visual Proof on the F.O.I.L. method of order of operations.

  • SPECIAL 0x11 Confessions of a Youtuber

    • May 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    Explanation of the F.O.I.L. video and why there are sponsors.

  • S2013E10 The Order of Operations is Wrong

    • May 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    Morally wrong, that is...

  • S2013E11 Can Humans Really Feel Temperature?

    • May 30, 2013
    • YouTube

    Can Humans Really Feel Temperature? Henry takes a look at the same question Dr. Derek Muller of the channel Veritasium did.

  • S2013E12 How to Turn Sound Into Light: Sonoluminescence

    • June 3, 2013
    • YouTube

    Another awesome thing the Mantis Shrimp does... The BEST Sonoluminescence reference: http://doc.utwente.nl/42577/1/single-bubble_sonoluminescence.pdf

  • S2013E13 Where is the True North Pole?

    • June 30, 2013
    • YouTube

    Is it in the Arctic Ocean? In Canada? Russia?

  • S2013E14 Do We Expand With The Universe?

    • July 31, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explains if we expand with the Universe or if the Universe expands at all.

  • S2013E15 Science, Religion, and the Big Bang

    • August 19, 2013
    • YouTube

    Looking for God, finding science.

  • S2013E16 Where Was The Big Bang?

    • August 23, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explains how our frame of reference determines where we see the center of the Universe.

  • S2013E17 MAGNETS: How Do They Work?

    • September 23, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explains how magnets work, with some help from Dr. Derek Muller over at Veritasium.

  • S2013E18 How to Destroy a Magnet (+ interactive periodic table)

    • September 28, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explains how to destroy a magnet.

  • S2013E19 Magnetic Levitation

    • October 18, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explains diamagnetism and how to levitate a frog.

  • S2013E20 3 Simple Ways to Time Travel (& 3 Complicated Ones)

    • October 26, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry Explains how time travel is not only possible, but we all do it every day.

  • S2013E21 What is Sea Level?

    • November 25, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explains what sea level is. FREE FACT: An oblate spheroid is a special case of an ellipsoid where two of the semi-principal axes are the same size.

  • S2013E22 Why The Full Moon is Better in Winter

    • December 17, 2013
    • YouTube

    Henry explain why the Earth's tilted axis not only effects the seasons but our view of the moon.

Season 2014

Season 2015

Season 2016

  • S2016E01 How To Discover Weird New Particles - Emergent Quantum Quasiparticles

    • February 1, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about weird condensed matter systems, aka materials that have bizarre emergent particles in them that are unlike most other particles in the universe.

  • S2016E02 Concrete Does Not Dry Out

    • February 10, 2016
    • YouTube

    Concrete doesn’t dry - it sets!

  • S2016E03 How Do We Know What Air is Like on Other Planets?

    • February 24, 2016
    • YouTube

  • S2016E04 The Limb of the Sun

    • March 11, 2016
    • YouTube

    Also, why do some flames look hollow?

  • S2016E05 Transporters and Quantum Teleportation

    • March 15, 2016
    • YouTube
  • S2016E06 Aliens - Are We Looking in the Wrong Place?

    • March 24, 2016
    • YouTube
  • S2016E07 Why You Should Care About Nukes

    • March 29, 2016
    • YouTube
  • S2016E08 Why Are Airplane Engines So Big?

    • April 11, 2016
    • YouTube

    The physics behind the perfect size of a jet engine.

  • S2016E09 Solution to the Grandfather Paradox

    • May 13, 2016
    • YouTube

    What if you went back in time and killed your own grandfather? Would you still be born? Or would you have thus killed yourself?

  • S2016E10 How Long To Fall Through The Earth?

    • May 23, 2016
    • YouTube
  • S2016E11 Where Do Galaxies Come From?

    • June 28, 2016
    • YouTube
  • S2016E12 Gravitational Waves Explained Using Stick Figures

    • July 8, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about gravitational waves in the weak field limit as discovered by the LIGO collaboration, explained by parallels to electromagnetic radiation, sound waves, water waves, etc. I want to see Cat LIGO ASAP!

  • S2016E13 Hitting the Sun is HARD

    • July 19, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about the orbital mechanics of why it’s so hard to crash into the sun – the energy it takes to get there is astoundingly high, compared with leaving the solar system.

  • S2016E14 How Long Is A Day On The Sun?

    • August 4, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about the definition of a day, and how it applies (or not) on the sun. Solar day, sidereal day, universal coordinated time (UTC) day, etc. Length of a day.

  • S2016E15 The Twins Paradox Primer (Rotating TIME!)

    • August 19, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about the famous “Twin paradox” of special relativity, and how time can appear to be faster for two different observers at the same time.

  • S2016E16 Complete Solution To The Twins Paradox

    • August 26, 2016
    • YouTube

    One of the most famous paradoxes of all of physics – who's older? Who's younger? and WHY?

  • S2016E17 Why Doesn't Time Flow Backwards?

    • September 29, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about why entropy gives rise to the arrow of time, and also how the initial low-entropy condition of the universe is responsible for the fact that we experience time right now, and how ultimately it will lead to the high-entropy heat death of the universe.

  • S2016E18 Do Cause and Effect Really Exist?

    • October 6, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about why there's no such thing as cause and effect at the level of fundamental particle physics, and how our everyday experience of cause and effect arises due to entropy, the large-scale arrow of time, and the leverage certain events have over others. This can explain not only the existence of causes and effects, but also memories, records and so on.

  • S2016E19 Where Does Complexity Come From?

    • October 12, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about the difference between complexity and entropy, and how we can see complex things like life, planets, galaxies, humans, intelligence, consciousness, etc arising in our universe when the overall tendency of the second law of thermodynamics is towards increasing entropy and disorder. It turns out that gravitational collapse & other complex structures (such as tendrils that form when coffee and milk mix) arise naturally as part of the path towards increasing entropy.

  • S2016E20 How Entropy Powers The Earth (Big Picture Ep. 4)

    • October 21, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about how we don't just need energy to power our lives, we need *low entropy* energy!

  • S2016E21 What is the Purpose of Life?

    • October 26, 2016
    • YouTube

    This video is about how life arose and what its main function or purpose in the universe seems to be.

  • S2016E22 Is The Moon Held Up By A Spring? How Perspective Shapes Reality

    • November 17, 2016
    • YouTube
  • S2016E23 No Cloning

    • December 27, 2016
    • YouTube

    Why you can’t clone Schrödinger’s cat: this video presents the full proof of the “No Cloning” Theorem in Quantum Mechanics – without any fancy math! (stereotypical qubit has been replaced with Schrödinger’s cat). The full proof relies on the linearity of quantum (aka unitary) transformations, and the tensor product of multiple systems, to show that perfect cloning is impossible (though teleportation is allowed)

Season 2017

  • S2017E01 How to Teleport Schrödinger's Cat

    • March 15, 2017
    • YouTube

    How to teleport Schrödinger’s cat: this video presents the full quantum teleportation procedure, in which an arbitrary qubit (spin, etc) is teleported from Alice to Bob by way of a pair of particles entangled in a bell (EPR) state and the transmission of information via a classical channel.

  • S2017E02 Should You Walk or Run When It's Cold?

    • March 30, 2017
    • YouTube

    Is it better to walk or run when it's cold out? If you run, then you have to deal with wind, wind chill, etc, but your body generates more heat. If you stay still, standing or walking slowly, you don't generate as much heat, but don't deal with the wind. Note: the simple calculations in this video don't very well take into account the baseline metabolic rate/heat generation, even at rest, of humans.

  • S2017E03 Can We Survive Curiosity?

    • April 22, 2017
    • YouTube

    This is a video about how science is both inherently political and apolitical. And how hopefully we won't end up in nuclear war...

  • S2017E04 How Do We Know The Universe Is ACCELERATING?

    • April 26, 2017
    • YouTube

    The universe is expanding – this we know from looking at red shifts of distant galaxies – but the acceleration of the universe's expansion is harder to measure. It requires measuring the change of recession velocity over time, and it's done by comparing Type Ia supernovas as standard candles at different distances, which is how we know the universe is accelerating!

  • S2017E05 Ring AROUND the Earth?

    • May 19, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about what would happen if we built a giant ring around earth – what would happen to the ring, that is. Would if fall? Collapse? Start spinning?

  • S2017E06 Footnote †: Unstable Equilibrium

    • May 19, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is a footnote for the video about the ring around the earth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xSPlQUejd8 Essentially, a ring around the earth is in unstable equilibrium, so it would stay put, but then fall one way or the other as soon as any asymmetry (even thermal or quantum fluctuations) developed.

  • S2017E07 Footnote †: Double Pendulums Are Crazy

    • June 14, 2017
    • YouTube

    Neutral particle oscillation (like neutrino oscillation) is a superposition effect, and a similar effect can also be seen in a coupled double pendulum system where the interaction states are in superpositions of the "free" modes (called eigenstates).

  • S2017E08 Quantum SHAPE-SHIFTING: Neutrino Oscillations

    • June 14, 2017
    • YouTube
  • S2017E09 The 'Mountain Or Valley?' Illusion

    • June 29, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about a multistable perceptual illusion, similar to the hollow face illusion, whereby maps or aerial or satellite photos look upside down/inside out, ie, concave (valley) parts look convex and convex (mountainous) parts look concave. Just flip the images around and things will make a lot more sense! It's just because our eyes gauge depth based on the location of shadows, and the sun always casts shadows on the bottoms of things.

  • S2017E10 Why It's HARD To Land on Mars

    • July 14, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about why it's harder to successfully land spacecraft and landers and rovers on Mars than on Earth, or Venus, or the Moon, or Titan, or asteroids. It all comes down to atmospheric density! When there's no atmosphere, you can do a powered descent in a flimsy tinfoil spacecraft like the Lunar Module, and when there's plenty of atmosphere you can do an unpowered descent via heat shield and parachutes like the space shuttle, Apollo command module, Soyuz, Huygens, etc. But on Mars with its thin air, you have to do both powered & unpowered descent, getting the worst of both worlds.

  • S2017E11 What Is The Shape of Space?

    • July 20, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about the local and global geometry and curvature of space and spacetime, aka, is space flat? Negatively curved? Positively curved? etc.

  • S2017E12 Will Batteries Power The World? | The Limits Of Lithium-ion

    • August 8, 2017
    • YouTube

    Can Batteries Power Everything? This video is about the physical and chemical limitations to electrolytic batteries, and how we might surpass the energy density and specific energy of lithium-ion batteries (like the Panasonic 18650 batteries used in the Tesla Model S, for example).

  • S2017E13 Black Holes, Neutron Stars, and White Dwarfs

    • August 15, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about the differences between the corpses or final degenerate dense star forms that dead stars take: black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs. The main distinguishing features between them are the mass cutoffs (Chandrasekhar limit and Tolman-Oppenheimer-Volkoff Limit), the matter that makes them up (electrons, protons, neutrons, singularity?), and what holds them up against gravity – not thermal pressure from nuclear fusion like in a star like the sun, but electron or neutron degeneracy pressure (fermi pressure/pauli exclusion principle), and the strong nuclear force, and... nothing (in the case of a black hole).

  • S2017E14 Correlation CAN Imply Causation! | Statistics Misconceptions

    • August 17, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about how causal models (which use causal networks) allow us to infer causation from correlation, proving the common refrain not entirely accurate: statistics CAN be used to prove causality! Including: Reichenbach's principle, common causes, feedback, entanglement, EPR paradox, and so on.

  • S2017E15 Misconceptions Footnote †: Randomness and Feedback

    • August 17, 2017
    • YouTube

    Feedback loops and spurious correlations!

  • S2017E16 Myths and Facts About Superintelligent AI

    • August 29, 2017
    • YouTube

    We live in an era of self driving cars, autonomous drones, deep learning algorithms, computers that beat humans at chess and go, and so on. So it’s natural to ask, will artificial superintelligence replace humans, take our jobs, and destroy human civilization? Or will AI just become tools like regular computers. AI researcher Max Tegmark helps explain the myths and facts about superintelligence, the impending machine takeover, etc.

  • S2017E17 Bell's Theorem: The Quantum Venn Diagram Paradox

    • September 13, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about Bell's Theorem, one of the most fascinating results in 20th century physics. Even though Albert Einstein (together with collaborators in the EPR Paradox paper) wanted to show that quantum mechanics must be incomplete because it was nonlocal (he didn't like "spooky action at a distance"), John Bell managed to prove that any local real hidden variable theory would have to satisfy certain simple statistical properties that quantum mechanical experiments (and the theory that describes them) violate. Since then, GHZ and others have managed to extend the theoretical work, and Alain Aspect performed the first Bell test experiment in the late 1980s.

  • S2017E18 Solar Panels Made With a Particle Accelerator?!

    • September 19, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about using particle accelerators as part of the solar panel silicon wafer manufacturing process. The accelerators embed protons into the wafer crystals, allowing them to break and separate from the main crystal in much thinner wafers with no waste silicon. Thus, monocrystalline silicon can be used, which is more efficient.

  • S2017E19 How to Build a Teleporter with Aliens

    • September 30, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about the international system of units (SI), the international prototype kilogram (the IPK or "le grande k"), and specifically, why we need to redefine our base units in terms of fundamental constants - aka, concepts & ideas - rather than physical objects. The second is already defined in terms of a certain number of oscillations of a photon of the ground state hyperfine splitting energy of Cesium, the meter is then defined as how far light travels in a particular fraction of a second, and hopefully soon, the kilogram will be defined either using the Avogadro approach of counting silicon atoms in a sphere, or using the Watt (Kibble) Balance approach of measuring Planck's constant, h, as used in the formula E=hf for the energy of a photon, which relates to mass via Einstein's famous E=mc^2.

  • S2017E20 Simpson's Paradox

    • October 24, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about Simpson's paradox, a statistical paradox and ecological fallacy where seemingly contradictory results are implied by a single set of data depending on how it's grouped. The paradox can arise in medical studies, student test scores, and so on.

  • S2017E21 Time Travel in Fiction Rundown

    • October 26, 2017
    • YouTube

    For ages I’ve been thinking about doing a video analyzing time travel in fiction and doing a comparison of different fictional time travels – some do use wormholes, some relativistic/faster than light travel with time dilation, some closed timelike curves, some have essentially “magic” or no consistent rules that make any sense, or TARDIS's, or whatever. This video is an explanation of how time travel functions in different popular movies, books, & shows – not how it works “under the hood", but how it causally affects the perspective of characters’ timelines (who has free will? can you change things by going back to the past or forwards into the future?). In particular, I explain Ender's Game, Planet of the Apes, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Primer, Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Back to the Future, Groundhog Day, Looper, the video game “Braid”, and Lifeline.

  • S2017E22 Are University Admissions Biased? | Simpson's Paradox Part 2

    • October 31, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about how to tell whether or not university admissions are biased using statistics: aka, it's about Simpson's Paradox again!

  • S2017E23 The Black Hole Tipping Point

    • November 30, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about the Schwarzschild radius of a black hole, (its "event horizon"), and how much mass and density is required to reach the point of no return where an object like a star, neutron star, red giant, etc will collapse into a black hole singularity. You can calculate it yourself using just the volume equation for a sphere, and the equation for the Schwarzschild radius (and knowing the speed of light and Newton's gravitational constant).

  • S2017E24 The Unreasonable Efficiency of Black Holes

    • December 31, 2017
    • YouTube

    This video is about how efficient various reactions are at converting mass to energy (as we know from the Einstein mass-energy equivalence of E=mc^2). Antimatter is very efficient but it is not naturally-occurring. Chemical reactions like fire or explosions are very inefficient. Nuclear fission and nuclear fusion are better, but not amazing on an absolute scale. Non-rotating black holes (Schwarzschild) and rotating (Kerr) are by far the most efficient, due to their accretion disks and very small radius of their innermost stable circular orbits.

Season 2018

  • S2018E01 How We Know Black Holes Exist

    • January 11, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about the astronomical amount of astronomical evidence for black holes, ranging from x-ray binaries with accretion disks, supermassive infrared-radiating galactic nuclei black holes, orbital characteristics of high mass binaries, and direct gravitational wave detection of inspiraling merging black hole binaries with LIGO. Yes, they're real.

  • S2018E02 Why is Special Relativity Hard? - Special Relativity Chapter 1

    • January 31, 2018
    • YouTube

    This is the first in a series of videos about special relativity. This is definitely not an academic course, but it's going to be a more in depth and developed exploration of a single topic than a typical standalone MinutePhysics video. I've been greatly inspired (and heckled) to do this by my friend Grant Sanderson of 3blue1brown who's set the standard for this kind of thing with his excellent series - serieses? - on calculus and linear algebra. So, special relativity. Special relativity is one of the most popularly famous ideas in physics – it's that thing that Einstein figured out about the speed of light and space and time and E=mc^2! It changed our understanding of the universe. And its core ideas are accessible in principle to anyone who understands some basic algebra and geometry - you don't even need to know calculus! And yet in spite of this, special relativity is one of the subjects in physics that confuses the most people, and in many cases turns them away from physics altogether.

  • S2018E03 Spacetime Diagrams - Special Relativity Chapter 2

    • February 28, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 2 in my series on special relativity, and it covers spacetime diagrams, rotational and translational symmetry of both time and space, how certain transformations preserve distances (measured in terms of a reference like a meter or second), and so on. We'll wait until the next video to talk about Lorentz transformations, relativity of velocity, minkowski diagrams, and the speed of light.

  • S2018E04 The Brown Dwarf Debate

    • March 23, 2018
    • YouTube

    Thanks to NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) project and the Space Telescope Science Institute for supporting this video. This video is about the line between Brown dwarfs and gas giant planets (aka super Jupiter's): does it exist? Is it the deuterium-burning threshold? Behavior? Metallicity? Formation? Or is there no meaningful scientific distinction, and are brown dwarfs and giant planets really all on a spectrum with no clear line between them?

  • S2018E05 Lorentz Transformations - Special Relativity Chapter 3

    • April 3, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 3 in my series on special relativity, and it covers boosts, galilean transformations, newtonian relativity, and of course Lorentz transformations, the constancy of the speed of light, relative changes of velocity between inertial reference frames, etc - some of the stuff Einstein figured out. I introduce the mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe.

  • S2018E06 Relativity of Simultaneity - Special Relativity Chaper 4

    • April 26, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 4 in my series on special relativity, and it covers how things that appear simultaneous from one perspective in our universe aren't simultaneous from other moving perspectives - that is, from inertial reference frames moving at different speeds. This is explained via the Lorentz transformation of coordinates of the events in question, enacted with a mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe.

  • S2018E07 Length Contraction and Time Dilation - Special Relativity Ch. 5

    • May 29, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 5 in my series on special relativity, and it covers how things that are moving (that is, moving relative to an inertial reference frame) at different speeds appear to be shorter in length... and longer in length. And shorter in time, and longer in time. It all makes sense, I promise, and is clear when you use the Lorentz transformation of coordinates of the events in question, enacted with a mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe.

  • S2018E08 Relativistic Addition of Velocity - Special Relativity Ch. 6

    • June 12, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 6 in my series on special relativity, and it covers the topic of relativistic addition of velocity: aka, how things that are moving relative to one inertial reference frame, which is moving relative to another reference frame, what speed or velocity are those things moving relative to the second frame. We'll show this using the Lorentz transformation of moving worldlines, enacted with a mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe.

  • S2018E09 Extraterrestrial Cycloids - Why Are They on Europa?

    • June 26, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about the cycloid curves on Jupiter's moon Europa - they're ridges or valleys in the icy surface that formed due to some sort of geological or tectonic-esque phenomenon. The answer involves ping pong balls, the pacific ring of fire, subduction, tidal bulges, and tailcracking,

  • S2018E10 Spacetime Intervals: Not EVERYTHING is Relative - Special Relativity Ch. 7

    • July 10, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 7 in my series on special relativity, and it covers the idea that some things AREN'T relative: there IS a sense of absolute length and absolute time, which can be agreed upon from all moving perspectives (as long as they're inertial reference frames). In particular, proper length and proper time, aka the spacetime interval. Essentially, this is the spacetime version of the pythagorean theorem, and we'll explore it using the Lorentz transformations of lengths and time intervals, enacted with a mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe.

  • S2018E11 Feynman's Lost Lecture

    • July 20, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video recounts a lecture by Richard Feynman giving an elementary demonstration of why planets orbit in ellipses. See the excellent book by Judith and David Goodstein, "Feynman's lost lecture”, for the full story behind this lecture, and a deeper dive into its content.

  • S2018E12 The Physics of Caramel: How To Make a Caramelized Sugar Cube

    • July 24, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about how the physics and chemistry of sugar (in particular, how it melts, and how it caramelizes) is more complicated than you might think. It involves fructose, sucrose, glucose, and a sticky mess.

  • S2018E13 The Twins Paradox Hands-On Explanation - Special Relativity Ch. 8

    • August 14, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is chapter 8 in my series on special relativity, and it presents a hands-on explanation of the resolution to the Twins Paradox using the mechanical minkowski diagram, aka mechanical Lorentz transformation, aka spacetime globe. Of course, the Twins paradox can be resolved with an understanding of spacetime intervals, relative inertial frames of reference, etc, but this is a nice hands-on version where you actually measure the proper times on a real, physical spacetime diagram with a ruler.

  • S2018E14 How To Stop Structures from SHAKING: LEGO Saturn V Tuned Mass Damper

    • August 28, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about Tuned Mass Dampers, which can be used to reduce or avoid unwanted vibrations, swaying, swinging, bending, etc on engineered structures ranging from buildings, skyscrapers, electricity power transmission lines, airplane engines, formula one race cars, etc. TMD's use damped coupled oscillators.

  • S2018E15 Legitimate Cold Fusion Exists - Muon-Catalyzed Fusion

    • October 26, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about the original cold fusion: μ muon-catalyzed cold fusion of deuterium, tritium, hydrogen, into helium-3 and helium 4. The problems with it are the half-life of muons and the sticking of muons to alpha particles. Also involved are neutrons, protons, break-even, etc. This has nothing to do with fusion by capture in palladium electrodes.

  • S2018E16 Impossible Muons

    • November 13, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about how terrestrial muons are part of our experimental proof of time dilation, length contraction, and special relativity in general.

  • S2018E17 Hardy's Paradox - Quantum Double Double Slit Experiment

    • December 21, 2018
    • YouTube

    This video is about Hardy's Paradox, wherein an electron and positron (or photons polarized horizontally and vertically) pass through Mach-Zehnder interferometers that overlap such that the particles have a chance of annihilating. If they do annihilate, then the interference pattern changes and there is a probability for both particles to be detected in the "dark arms" of the detector, that is, where previously there was no probability for detection for either particle. The paradox has implications for local realism, contextuality, lorentz elements of reality, and has been used as an experimental setup for weak measurements.

Season 2019

  • S2019E01 How To Make MUONS

    • January 24, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about how to create muons in a particle accelerator via bombardment of heavy nuclei with protons, which results in creation of charged pions (plus and minus). The pions then decay into muons and mu neutrinos, and the muons then decay into electrons or positrons and more neutrinos. Muons also form in the upper atmosphere due to cosmic rays, and the uses of muons includes experimental tests of time dilation in special relativity, catalyzing muonic cold nuclear fusion, and more.

  • S2019E02 Shells of Cosmic Time

    • February 7, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about the cosmic distance scale and how we see objects farther away in space (ie at higher red shift) farther back in time because light takes time to reach us. Thus we can see not only stars and galaxies, but also the primordial stars & proto-galaxies, and even the remnants of the beginning of the universe itself: the CMB cosmic microwave background left over from the big bang.

  • S2019E03 How ISPs Violate the Laws of Mathematics

    • February 28, 2019
    • YouTube

    This joke video is about how Internet Service Providers (aka ISPs, internet companies, telecommunications companies, etc) violate the basic axioms of Zermelo-Fraenkel set theory. Like the axiom of choice (sometimes Well-ordering theorem), the Axiom of extensionality, Axiom of regularity (also called the Axiom of foundation), Axiom schema of specification, Axiom of pairing, Axiom of union, Axiom schema of replacement, Axiom of infinity, Axiom of power set.

  • S2019E04 Why Do Compressed Air Cans Get Cold?

    • April 2, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about compressed air cans (aka gas dusters) and why they get cold when you spray them.

  • S2019E05 How Quantum Computers Break Encryption - Shor's Algorithm Explained

    • April 30, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video explains Shor’s Algorithm, a way to efficiently factor large pseudoprime integers into their prime factors using a quantum computer. The quantum computation relies on the number-theoretic analysis of the factoring problem via modular arithmetic mod N (where N is the number to be factored), and finding the order or period of a random coprime number mod N. The exponential speedup comes in part from the use of the quantum fast fourier transform which achieves interference among frequencies that are not related to the period (period-finding is the goal of the QFT FFT).

  • S2019E06 How Shor's Algorithm Factors 314191

    • May 22, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video explains how Shor’s Algorithm factors the pseudoprime number 314191 into its prime factors using a quantum computer. The quantum computation relies on the number-theoretic analysis of the factoring problem via modular arithmetic mod N (where N is the number to be factored), and finding the order or period of a random coprime number mod N. The exponential speedup comes in part from the use of the quantum fast fourier transform which achieves interference among frequencies that are not related to the period (period-finding is the goal of the QFT FFT).

  • S2019E07 I Had to Build a Custom Mute Pedal for my Violin

    • June 3, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about how I designed and made my own custom mute guitar pedal for my clip-on mic and piezo pickup on my violin (fiddle). The mic is an AT Pro35 phantom powered XLR condensor microphone, and the pickup is a Fishman V200 piezoelectric transducer. I got all of the parts from PartsExpress.

  • S2019E08 Our Ignorance About Gravity

    • June 20, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about how little we know about the behavior of gravity at short length and distance scales, what the constraints are on the inverse square law/Newton's law of universal gravitation, at the human and microscopic and atomic scales. Only on solar system scales or larger do we have good constraints on Newton's law of gravitation.

  • S2019E09 The Portal Paradox

    • June 28, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about the Portal Paradox - a paradox in the video game Portal (and Portal 2) regarding whether or not a companion cube passing through a moving portal plops out of the other end with no speed (velocity, momentum), or shoots out at high speed. It’s a question of conservation of momentum, relativity of velocities, wormholes, 3D printers and quantum teleportation, glitches, and more.

  • S2019E10 Einstein's Biggest Blunder, Explained

    • August 1, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about how Albert Einstein made a mistake when applying the Field Equations of General Relativity to cosmology (in particular, to a static, constant density universe), and solved the problem by introducing the cosmological constant, rather than allowing for a dynamic universe with a scale factor - that is, the Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker universe, first developed by Alexander Friedmann of Russia. Later, it was discovered by the Slipher and Hubble red-shift that the universe is indeed expanding, and even later, by Schwarz and company in 1998, that the expansion is accelerating - aka, dark energy. And the cosmological constant was re-introduced.

  • S2019E11 Why Some Days Aren’t 24 Hours

    • August 23, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about the length of a solar day vs a stellar day vs a mean standard day, what they all have to do with each other and the earth's orbit, eccentricity, axial tilt, and so on. Also, aliens and asteroids. It'll explain the equation of time, and why the longest day is in December. The lab will also show you what days are like on all the other planets - Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and even - though it's not a planet - Pluto.

  • S2019E12 How to Build a Lava Moat

    • August 30, 2019
    • YouTube

    The world's most entertaining and useless self-help guide, from the brilliant mind behind the wildly popular webcomic xkcd and the #1 New York Times bestsellers What If? and Thing Explainer For any task you might want to do, there's a right way, a wrong way, and a way so monumentally complex, excessive, and inadvisable that no one would ever try it. How To is a guide to the third kind of approach. It's full of highly impractical advice for everything from landing a plane to digging a hole.

  • S2019E13 Protecting Privacy with MATH (Collab with the Census)

    • September 12, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video was made in collaboration with the US Census Bureau and fact-checked by Census Bureau scientists. Any opinions and errors are my own.

  • S2019E14 When It's OK to Violate Privacy

    • September 21, 2019
    • YouTube

    Cynthia Dwork (key inventor of Differential Privacy), giving a great intro talk about differential privacy

  • S2019E15 The Man Who Corrected Einstein

    • October 15, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about how Russian physicist Aleksandr Fridman corrected Albert Einstein about the expansion of the universe. Einstein thought that general relativity implied that space had to be static and unchanging, but he had made a technical error regarding the differentiation of the metric (in particular, I believe he mistook the determinant of the metric for a scalar rather than a tensor density of weight 2). Friedmann didn't make this differential geometric mistake, and the cosmologies he found from the Einstein Equations were more varied in their properties - they could be expanding, or contracting, or (with the cosmological constant), static.

  • S2019E16 Do Photons Cast Shadows?

    • November 6, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about two-photon (gamma-gamma) physics, and how photons can interact with each other - either mediated by a passing lepton, or gravitationally via lensing, or via vacuum fluctuation pair production of vertical particles (electron-positron pair, for example). This is the so-called "box diagram" feynman diagram.

  • S2019E17 Why Do Mirrors Flip Left & Right (but not up & down)?

    • December 6, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about why words flip left & right (aka horizontally) in a mirror but not up & down (aka vertically). The answer has to do with specular reflection, mirrors being like windows into another world (alternate universes, just with in and out flipped!), and transparency of the things we write on.

  • S2019E18 Reimagining the Periodic Table

    • December 20, 2019
    • YouTube

    This video is about cutting, taping, and rearranging the periodic table into the Left Step form, the Mendeleev's flower form, the cake form, the wide form, the standard form, and so on. A great holiday craft!!

Season 2020

  • S2020E01 How to Tell Matter From Antimatter | CP Violation & The Ozma Problem

    • February 26, 2020
    • YouTube

    This video is about the Ozma problem of distinguishing the chirality (ie left-handedness or right-handedness) of matter using weak interaction processes like beta decay (for example in uranium), or neutral kaon/k-meson decay. This is wrapped up in the phenomenon of CP violation, by which charge and parity are both violated by certain weak interaction processes - this enables antimatter to be unambiguously distinguished from matter, and left handed chirality from right handed.

  • S2020E02 How To Tell If We're Beating COVID-19

    • March 27, 2020
    • YouTube

    This video is a collaboration with Aatish Bhatia about how to see the COVID-19 tipping point - we present a better way to graph COVID-19 coronavirus cases using a logarithmic scale in "phase space" - plotting the growth rate against the cumulative cases, rather than either of these against time.

  • S2020E03 The Astounding Physics of N95 Masks

    • June 18, 2020
    • YouTube

    "The electrostatic charge of N95 masks is a major contributor to their filtration efficiency, improving it at least 10-fold over uncharged fabric" (Tsai et al., Journal of Electrostatics 2002; Peter Tsai, personal communication).

  • S2020E04 Why Masks Work BETTER Than You'd Think

    • September 8, 2020
    • YouTube

    This video is about how masks (whether surgical, or N95, or cloth) are counterintuitive and actually work much better epidemiologically than one might expect. Masks do double-duty, and the fraction of interactions with masks is much higher than the fraction of people wearing masks, so partially adopted, partially effective masks are able to reduce the basic reproduction number surprisingly well.

Season 2021

  • S2021E01 The Case for LESS Sensitive COVID Tests

    • January 14, 2021

    This video is about how cheap, fast, and LESS sensitive rapid antigen tests might be better for screening (& maybe surveillance) than PCR COVID tests due to the nature of contagiousness/infectiveness at various points on the viral load trajectory of symptomatic and asymptomatic COVID sars-COV-2 carriers.

  • S2021E02 General Relativity Explained in 7 Levels of Difficulty

    • February 18, 2021
    • YouTube

  • S2021E03 The Physics of Windmill Design

    • March 2, 2021
    • YouTube

    This video is about how physics dictates the design of modern windmills - why they are so big, have so few blades, and have such skinny blades.

  • S2021E04 Why Do Boats Make THIS Pattern?

    • March 21, 2021
    • YouTube

    This video is about the "Kelvin wake" shape of water wakes behind boats - we talk about mach angle, dispersion, superposition of many waves, and how these all lead to the pattern of a wake. We don't get into Froude number though...

  • S2021E05 Solution to the Windmill Paradox

    • April 1, 2021
    • YouTube

    The Solution to the Windmill Paradox. This video is about the tradeoff of Windmills: the fact that the more kinetic energy you extract from the wind the slower the wind goes, the less wind you have to extract energy from, etc. How much energy is the sweet spot to extract from the wind??

  • S2021E06 A Better Way To Picture Atoms

    • May 19, 2021
    • YouTube

    This video is about using Bohmian trajectories to visualize the wavefunctions of hydrogen orbitals, rendered in 3D using custom python code in Blender.

  • S2021E07 The Rocket & String Paradox

    • August 18, 2021
    • YouTube

    This video is about Bell's Spaceship Paradox of Special Relativity, wherein a pair of rockets (or spacecraft) connected by a weak thread accelerate with uniform acceleration, maintaining the same separation, and the question is: does the thread break? And if so, why?

  • S2021E08 The Problem With The Butterfly Effect

    • October 21, 2021
    • YouTube

  • S2021E09 Is Anything on the Internet Real?

    • December 22, 2021
    • YouTube

Season 2022

  • S2022E01 Most Collisions Are Secretly In One Dimension

    • May 26, 2022

    This video is about elastic and inelastic collisions in 1D, 2D and 3D - and how the collision of conservation of energy with conservation of momentum, plus a secret direction, results in a completely predetermined behavior for most collisions.

  • S2022E02 The Trinity of Quality

    • June 29, 2022
    • YouTube

    In order to make something good, you need to have the right combination of three things: Quality, Discernment and Taste. This video is about quality vs quantity, the paradox of quality, how to make good content and good videos, etc. Based on my experience over the last decade running a collaborative creative business, MinuteEarth, where we do regular internal reflection and training on the craft of science communication.

  • S2022E03 Another Portal Paradox

    • August 4, 2022
    • YouTube

    What happens if you extend a piston through a portal? Or try to sandwich a cube between two portals? That's right, it's time to explore more portal paradoxes!

  • S2022E04 How Many Fossils to Go an Inch?

    • August 18, 2022
    • YouTube

    A beautiful guest video by Robert Krulwich and Nate Milton

  • S2022E05 Passing A Portal Through Itself

    • September 1, 2022
    • YouTube

    This video is about what happens if you try to pass a portal (like in the video game Portal or Portal 2) through itself - do you get a paradox? Infinite recursion? Impossibility? Contradiction? The end of the world? Collapse of the wavefunction? Ultimately it ends up looking beautiful and weird and recursive and... just watch the video :)

  • S2022E06 You're Technically HOTTER Than The Sun

    • September 8, 2022
    • YouTube

  • S2022E07 Freezing water expands. What if you don't let it?

    • October 14, 2022
    • YouTube

  • S2022E08 Why Penrose Tiles Never Repeat

    • December 1, 2022
    • YouTube

    This video is about a better way to understand Penrose tilings (the famous tilings invented by Roger Penrose that never repeat themselves but still have some kind of order/pattern).

  • S2022E09 Geosynchronous Orbits are WEIRD

    • December 22, 2022
    • YouTube

    This video is about the physics of geosynchronous and geostationary orbits, why they exist, when they don't, when they're useful for communication/satellite TV, etc.

Season 2023

  • S2023E01 Are Magnetic Guitar Picks a Scam?

    • June 14, 2023
    • YouTube

    I was sent a magnetic guitar pick to review, so I reviewed it. Does it work? How? Why? What's the physics of electric guitar strings and pickups? Are magnets useful? Do they affect the strings? The pickups?

  • S2023E02 But What IS A Lens Flare?

    • December 6, 2023
    • YouTube

  • S2023E03 The LAST Eclipse in History

    • December 13, 2023
    • YouTube

    We are in the Golden Age of Solar Eclipses, but only for the moment. In fact, I'd argue we're already past peak solar eclipse and it's all downhill from here.

  • S2023E04 Should You Wipe Off Your Sweat?

    • December 20, 2023
    • YouTube

    If you’re in scorching heat, or when your body is working hard and you’ve got hot, hot sweat all over, sticky and stifling - does wiping off the sweat help you cool off? Or is it better to leave it on?

Season 2024

  • S2024E01 Why Aren't There Eclipses Every Month?

    • March 21, 2024
    • YouTube

    The moon orbits the earth once per month, which means the moon is on the sun side of the earth every month. So... "why aren't there eclipses every month?" is a question we will answer in this video!

  • S2024E02 Most Eclipses Come From the West?! Why?

    • April 1, 2024
    • YouTube

    The sun rises in the east, the moon rises in the east, and the stars rise in the east... but solar eclipses, oddly, come from the west. If total eclipses are caused by the sun and the moon, why don't they behave like the sun and the moon?

  • S2024E03 Which Planet Has the BEST Eclipse?

    • April 5, 2024
    • YouTube

    Solar eclipses don't just happen here on earth - moons of other planets also pass between those planets and the sun, resulting in various types of solar eclipses on Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune, and even non-planets like Pluto, Eris and various asteroids. So, where are the best eclipses in the solar system? For that, we need a tier list.

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