Scientific American Video
Summary: Get face time with leading scientists, explore cutting-edge technology and learn about the multiverse around you in these exclusive videos from ScientificAmerican.com
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- Artist: Scientific American
- Copyright: 2014, Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc.
Podcasts:
We could soon be learning more about black holes and binary star systems, according to Marianna Yuling Mao, of Mission San Jose High School in Fremont, Calif.
Third place and $50,000 went to Philip Streich, 18, of Platteville, Wisc., whose project focused on carbon nanotubes
On its eight-year data gathering mission, Dawn will be the first space probe to visit and orbit two solar system bodies other than Earth
Utilizing Electric Rockets for Deep-Space Exploration
They are one of the most spectacular sights in the solar system. What would it be like to stand on the mysterious moon?
A recently discovered fossil provides a much sought after answer to the mystery of how bats evolved.
Nancy Simmons of the American Museum of Natural History dispels some popular bat myths
Learn all about bats: from how they fly to how much blood a vampire drinks
Saturn's small, snow and ice-covered moon, Enceladus, only 310 miles (500 kilometers) across, has made a big impact on astronomers
The amount of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere is causing heat to be trapped, thereby contributing to global warming. A ScientificAmerican.com reporter explains one solution that may stop the problem from getting worse
Carbon is mentioned nearly everyday in the news, but do we really know what it is, and why is has such a bad reputation? ScientificAmerican.com reporter David Biello explains carbon in part one of this Instant Egghead episode
A train that doesn't even stop in Willoughby; Extinction rock; and more...
Voters who know their place; Chilling evidence of rapid climate meltdown; Humans to galaxy: "We're here!" via golden plaques and snack food; and DNA self-sequencing kit marketers parse "lab test"
Like a summer blockbuster, this episode is full of thrills--magnets that turn off a reporter's ability to speak; indestructible unmanned aerial vehicles; and more...
Scientists dissect the world's largest invertebrate, narwhals more threatened than polar bears, introduced lizards underwent super fast evolution, and a new way to program robots so they can improvise