Veritasium
Veritasium
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Veritasium on IMDB
First Aired: August 15th, 2010
Status: Continuing
Network: YouTube
Summary: Veritasium is an English-language educational science channel on YouTube created by Derek Muller in 2011. The videos range in style from interviews with experts, such as 2011 Physics Nobel Laureate Brian Schmidt, to science experiments, dramatisations, songs, and—a hallmark of the channel—interviews with the public to uncover misconceptions about science.
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Season 2011
Episode 1: Atomic Theory
Air Date: January 7th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 2: Thomson's Plum Pudding Model of the Atom
Air Date: January 27th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 3: Cathode Rays Lead to Thomson's Model of the Atom
Air Date: February 1st, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 4: Scientific Notation - Explained!
Air Date: February 2nd, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 5: I'm Atoms (Scientific Cover of Jason Mraz's I'm Yours)
Air Date: February 2nd, 2011
Episode 6: Scientific Notation - Example
Air Date: February 3rd, 2011
Episode 7: The Difference Between Mass and Weight
Air Date: February 7th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 8: Egg Experiment to Demonstrate Intertia
Air Date: February 9th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 9: Gravity (Scientific Version of John Mayer's Gravity)
Air Date: February 12nd, 2011
Episode 10: How Far Away is the Moon? (The Scale of the Universe)
Air Date: February 17th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 11: What is a Force?
Air Date: February 17th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 12: What Forces Are Acting On You?
Air Date: February 18th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 13: Why Does the Moon Orbit Earth?
Air Date: February 21st, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 14: What Is Gravity?
Air Date: February 22nd, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 15: Best Film on Newton's Third Law. Ever.
Air Date: February 25th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 16: Calculating Gravitational Attraction
Air Date: February 27th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 17: Which Hits The Ground First?
Air Date: March 1st, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 18: Misconceptions About Falling Objects
Air Date: March 3rd, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 19: Is There Gravity In Space?
Air Date: March 8th, 2011
Summary: 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).
Episode 20: Three Incorrect Laws of Motion
Air Date: March 10th, 2011
Summary: 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'.
Episode 21: Experiments A Cappella
Air Date: March 14th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 22: Khan Academy and the Effectiveness of Science Videos
Air Date: March 17th, 2011
Episode 23: What Are Atoms and Isotopes?
Air Date: March 22nd, 2011
Episode 24: Supercooled Water - Explained!
Air Date: March 22nd, 2011
Episode 25: How Damaging is Radiation?
Air Date: March 25th, 2011
Episode 26: What Powers Australia?
Air Date: March 27th, 2011
Episode 27: Galileo the Scientific Parrot
Air Date: March 30th, 2011
Episode 28: Radiation vs Radioactive Atoms
Air Date: April 9th, 2011
Episode 29: Sound + Fire = Rubens' Tube
Air Date: April 12nd, 2011
Episode 30: Types of Radiation
Air Date: April 29th, 2011
Episode 31: What Is Electricity? (Are You Gonna Be My Girl?)
Air Date: May 1st, 2011
Episode 32: How Old Is The Earth?
Air Date: May 8th, 2011
Episode 33: Where Did The Earth Come From?
Air Date: May 12nd, 2011
Episode 34: Veritasium Bungee Jumps!
Air Date: May 18th, 2011
Episode 35: When Is A Bungee Jumper's Acceleration Max?
Air Date: May 25th, 2011
Episode 36: Option A - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump
Air Date: May 25th, 2011
Episode 37: Option B - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump
Air Date: May 25th, 2011
Episode 38: Option C - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump
Air Date: May 25th, 2011
Episode 39: Option D - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump
Air Date: May 25th, 2011
Episode 40: Option E - Acceleration of a Bungy Jump
Air Date: May 25th, 2011
Episode 41: Can You Perceive Acceleration?
Air Date: May 29th, 2011
Episode 42: Shadow Illusion
Air Date: June 13rd, 2011
Episode 43: Misconceptions About Heat
Air Date: June 29th, 2011
Episode 44: Fire Syringe
Air Date: July 10th, 2011
Episode 45: Persistence Of Vision
Air Date: July 16th, 2011
Episode 46: Why Does The Earth Spin?
Air Date: July 21st, 2011
Episode 47: How Does The Earth Spin?
Air Date: July 24th, 2011
Episode 48: Why Is Ice Slippery?
Air Date: August 4th, 2011
Episode 49: Does Pressure Melt Ice?
Air Date: August 13rd, 2011
Episode 50: Australian Science Week 2011
Air Date: August 14th, 2011
Episode 51: Ice Cutting Experiment
Air Date: August 20th, 2011
Episode 52: Ice Cutting Experiment 2
Air Date: August 21st, 2011
Episode 53: What Is Chemistry?
Air Date: August 22nd, 2011
Episode 54: What Is Water Made Of?
Air Date: August 24th, 2011
Episode 55: Impress Her With Nanodiamonds
Air Date: August 27th, 2011
Episode 56: Chain Drop Experiment
Air Date: August 29th, 2011
Episode 57: Chain Drop Answer 2
Air Date: August 29th, 2011
Episode 58: What Colour Is Most Attractive?
Air Date: September 5th, 2011
Episode 59: Imploding Drum
Air Date: September 6th, 2011
Episode 60: States of Matter
Air Date: September 15th, 2011
Summary: 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.
Episode 61: Slinky Drop Extended
Air Date: September 21st, 2011
Summary: 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?
Episode 62: Slinky Drop Answer
Air Date: September 21st, 2011
Episode 63: Slinky Drop
Air Date: September 21st, 2011
Episode 64: Make Plasma With Grapes In The Microwave!
Air Date: October 1st, 2011
Episode 65: Supersized Slow-Mo Slinky Drop
Air Date: October 10th, 2011
Episode 66: Nobel Prize Winner Brian Schmidt - Physics 2011
Air Date: October 16th, 2011
Episode 67: YouTube SpaceLab Intro by Veritasium
Air Date: October 16th, 2011
Episode 68: Physics Nobel Prize 2011 - Brian Schmidt
Air Date: October 23rd, 2011
Episode 69: Can You Go the Speed of Light?
Air Date: November 1st, 2011
Episode 70: Atomic Rant
Air Date: November 10th, 2011
Episode 71: What Is The Magnus Force?
Air Date: November 24th, 2011
Episode 72: A Human Being Is A Part Of The Whole
Air Date: December 3rd, 2011
Episode 73: What Causes The Phases Of The Moon?
Air Date: December 12nd, 2011
Episode 74: How To Make Graphene
Air Date: December 19th, 2011
Episode 75: Candle Trick
Air Date: December 30th, 2011
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