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The Geometry Of Life

YouthMathNatureScienceBiology
Researchers have come up with a new way to create patterns in petri dishes using bacteria.

Falling Snowflakes

KidsMathMusicEducationFun
Falling Snowflakes is a simple winter counting song.

The Geometry Of Life

YouthFunMathNatureScience
Tiling patterns can be found thoughout the natural world - from honeycomb to fish scales.

The Biggest Project in Modern Mathematics

YouthMathScience
Robert Langlands outlined striking conjectures that predicted a correspondence between two objects from completely different fields of math.

The Riddle That Seems Impossible Even If You Know The Answer

AdultsEducationMathScienceProblem-Solving
The 100 Prisoners Riddle feels completely impossible even once you know the answer. This video is sponsored by Brilliant.

Hexaflexagons

YouthFunMathScienceCreativityArt
Hooraaaay flexagons!

Doodle Music

YouthFunMathMusicArt
A visual and musical expression of mathematical symmetry groups.

Combinations of 52 cards (52 factorial)

AdultsMathPsychologyScience
Whenever you shuffle a deck of 52 cards, it is quite likely that you are achieving something never done before in history. The number of combinations is 52 factorial.

Picked A Strawberry

KidsMathMusicEducationNutrition
Let's pick some berries and practice counting!

Six In The Bed

KidsMathMusicEducationHow-to
Practice counting down from 6.

Moebius Strips

YouthMathScienceEducation
Students make Moebius strips and use them to demonstrate the interconnectedness of an environment.

How Imaginary Numbers Were Invented

AdultsHistoryHumanScienceMath
A general solution to the cubic equation was long considered impossible, until we gave up the requirement that math reflect reality.

The Simplest Math Problem No One Can Solve

AdultsEducationHistoryMathScience
The Collatz Conjecture is the simplest math problem no one can solve — it is easy enough for almost anyone to understand but notoriously difficult to solve.

Can you solve the fantasy election riddle? - Dennis E. Shasha

AdultsEducationHumanMathPoliticsSociety
After much debate, the realm has decided dragon jousting may not be the best way to choose its leaders, and has begun transitioning to democracy.

Why "Nothing" Matters in Science

AdultsData ScienceMathScience
Null results often get a bad rap, sometimes characterized as a study "finding nothing," but there's a lot we can learn from studies whose results fail to support their hypotheses.

The Ridiculous Way We Used To Calculate Pi

AdultsEducationHistoryMathScience
For thousands of years, mathematicians were calculating Pi the obvious but numerically inefficient way. Then Newton came along and changed the game. This video is sponsored by Brilliant.

The Odd Number Rule

AdultsData ScienceEducationScienceMath
Micheal teaches us about the "Odd Number Rule".

Game theory challenge: Can you predict human behavior?

AdultsHumanPsychologyScienceMath
Solve this classic game theory challenge: given integers from 0 to 100, what would the whole number closest to ⅔ of the average of all numbers guessed be?

What if a Radioactive Spider Bites You?

AdultsAnimalsMediaScienceMathGaming
Everyone knows that when you're bitten by a radioactive animal, you get superpowers... right? Kyle weaves a web of facts and math to ensnare the truth in this week's Because Science!

How Hard Can You Hit a Golf Ball? (at 100,000 FPS)

AdultsMathMediaPhysicsScience
We used a pressurized vacuum cannon to get the golf ball up to speeds of over 500 miles per hour.

April Fool's Day

TeachersEducationMathTeacher CafeHumorEntertainmentCulture
April Fool's Day is the perfect time to play some light-hearted pranks on your friends, family, and co-workers; and if you’re a teacher, pulling an unexpected fast one on your students can be entertaining -- and memorable -- for everyone.