TED-Ed - Channel
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How do vitamins work? - Ginnie Trinh Nguyen
View full lesson: Vitamins are the building blocks that keep our bodies running; they help buil... -
Inside the ant colony - Deborah M. Gordon
View full lesson: Ants have one of the most complex social organizations in the animal kingdom;... -
The history of chocolate - Deanna Pucciarelli
View full lesson: If you can’t imagine life without chocolate, you’re lucky you weren’t born b... -
The death of the universe - Renée Hlozek
View full lesson: The shape, contents and future of the universe are all intricately related. W... -
How cosmic rays help us understand the universe - Veronica Bindi
View full lesson: We only know 4% of what the universe is made up of. Can we also know what lie... -
Football physics: The "impossible" free kick - Erez Garty
View full lesson: In 1997, Brazilian football player Roberto Carlos set up for a 35 meter free ... -
The science behind the myth: Homer's "Odyssey" - Matt Kaplan
View full lesson: Homer's "Odyssey" recounts the adventures of the Greek hero Odysseus during h... -
Exploring other dimensions - Alex Rosenthal and George Zaidan
View full lesson: Imagine a two-dimensional world -- you, your friends, everything is 2D. In hi... -
The physics of the "hardest move" in ballet - Arleen Sugano
View full lesson: In the third act of "Swan Lake", the Black Swan pulls off a seemingly endless... -
Music as a language - Victor Wooten
View full lesson: Music is a powerful communication tool--it causes us to laugh, cry, think and... -
How big is a mole? (Not the animal, the other one.) - Daniel Dulek
View full lesson here: The word "mole" suggests a small, furry burrowing animal to many. But i... -
How does your body process medicine? - Céline Valéry
View full lesson: Have you ever wondered what happens to a painkiller, like ibuprofen, after yo...