An amazing sequel to Scale of the Universe. See the smallest and biggest objects in our universe. This version is animated and has lots more objects to view.
"Cambridge University Library is pleased to present the first items in its Foundations of Science collection: a selection from the Papers of Sir Isaac Newton. The Library holds the most important and substantial collection of Newton's scientific and mathematical manuscripts and over the next few months we intend to make most of our Newton papers available on this site."
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3ji4gneirg [Moderator] 6 months ago
too bad this show fucking sucked. these god damn retards running around doing shit with a high speed camera.. it's written as if the audience is a group of 4th graders. make a high speed video of you trying to fit a whole live grenade in your mouths.. then maybe i'll watch.
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TitsOrGTFO [Moderator] 6 months ago
You can see this happen if you piss in the shower, little water balls will roll across the top of the water, and they'll be piss colored!
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Joe The Videographer [Moderator] 4 months ago
A shame that some dimwitted and rather vulgar children seem compelled to comment on every post. Personally, I enjoy this show. Specialized film cameras could do this for years, but they were very expensive to own and operate. Technology now makes it much easier. The pioneer of the high speed film cameras was Harold Edgerton. Well worth a look if you have the time.
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Baldev Barha [Moderator] 6 months ago
Looks amazing at 2000 FPS. Try it with hot water drops dropping into cold water. You will actually see the spherical water drops floa
Martin Burrett 08 Aug 11 11:57:09A great site from the Open University. See evolution in action... slowly, with snails from across the world. You can submit your own data. http://ictmagic.wikispaces.com/Science
Squishy circuits are a project from the Thomas Lab at the University of St. Thomas. The goal of the project is to design tools and activities which allow kids of all ages to create circuits and explore electronics using play dough.
A period table of QR codes which link to short video clips from the University of Nottingham which explains the properties of each element. A must for every Chemistry 2.0 classroom wall.
Martin Burrett 26 Nov 12 05:17:49
This is an amazing map of our closest 100,000 stars. Zoom and explore our galaxy. See binary systems and exotic stars in exquisite 3D detail. Requires Google Chrome.
A website containing links to videos associated with specific elements of the periodic table... and the links are arranged as found on the table itself! The links jump to various YouTube videos that are embedded in the site. There are a number of other video resources found on the site, so be sure to explore as much as you can.