Scientific American Video show

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:

 Intel Baby Nobels Finalist: Marianna Mao | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:03:29

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.

 Intel Baby Nobels Finalist: Philip Streich | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:05:24

Third place and $50,000 went to Philip Streich, 18, of Platteville, Wisc., whose project focused on carbon nanotubes

 NASA's Dawn on "Star-Trek"-Like Voyage | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:03:22

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 | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:04:45

Utilizing Electric Rockets for Deep-Space Exploration

 The Geysers of Enceladus | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:03:29

They are one of the most spectacular sights in the solar system. What would it be like to stand on the mysterious moon?

 Bats Beyond Twilight: Part 3 | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:06:28

A recently discovered fossil provides a much sought after answer to the mystery of how bats evolved.

 Bats Beyond Twilight: Part 2 | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:02:13

Nancy Simmons of the American Museum of Natural History dispels some popular bat myths

 Bats Beyond Twilight: Part 1 | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:04:44

Learn all about bats: from how they fly to how much blood a vampire drinks

 Scientific American Exclusive | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:06:07

Saturn's small, snow and ice-covered moon, Enceladus, only 310 miles (500 kilometers) across, has made a big impact on astronomers

 Instant Egghead: Carbon, Part Two | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:01:55

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

 Instant Egghead: Carbon, Part One | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:01:39

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

 The Monitor (Episode 16) - In the Dark about White Matter No More | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:04:53

A train that doesn't even stop in Willoughby; Extinction rock; and more...

 The Monitor: Prime the Vote, Doritos for Science,and More | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:05:11

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"

 The Monitor: Episode 14 | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:04:54

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...

 The Monitor-Big Squid, Narwhals, Robots | File Type: video/m4v | Duration: 00:04:33

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

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