Tom Scott: Built for Science

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Science vs the Weather: Salford's Energy House
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Zero-G Experiments on Earth: The Bremen Drop Tower
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Drones vs Lightning
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How To Not Break A Mars Rover
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How The Arecibo Telescope Could Help Save The World
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Connectome Scanning: Looking at the Brain's Wiring
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Inside The Giant American Freezer Filled With Polar Ice
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Is It Dangerous To Talk To A Camera While Driving?
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How Zero-G Planes Work
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17 Tonnes of Spinning Glass: Making the World's Largest Telescope
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This week's guest video comes from Active Galactic Videos: go subscribe! https://www.youtube.com/ActiveGalacticVideos/ They got to walk on the dish of a telescope: .. show full overview
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Making Artificial Earthquakes with a Four-Tonne Steel Ball
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In Göttingen, Germany, there's a four-tonne steel ball that can be raised up a 14-metre tower -- and then dropped in less than two seconds, crashing back to earth. It makes tiny, .. show full overview
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G-Force, Jerk, and Passing Out In A Centrifuge
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Thanks to the Starrship team for arranging this! I'm also over on their channel, flying with the Blades: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iWY3-1gOrxk • At the Royal Air Force training .. show full overview
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Tilting an Icy Floor Until You Fall Over: WinterLab
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If you're in Canada, you need good winter boots. But how do you know whether they're actually safe, or whether you'll fall over the first time you step on ice? This is WinterLab, part of .. show full overview
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The Nuclear Reactor Run By Students
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At Reed College in Portland, Oregon, there's a TRIGA nuclear reactor, used for research. You can stand next to it and watch the blue glow from the bottom of a deep swimming pool. I had .. show full overview
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The Collapsible Crash Test Robot Car
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The Global Vehicle Target is the new standard for testing autonomous driving and crash test systems. To cameras and radar, it looks like a car: but if you hit it, it'll fly apart. So if .. show full overview
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I Got To See And Hold My Brain
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Subscribe to Neuro Transmissions! https://www.youtube.com/user/neurotransmissions or start with their video on how to train a cat to high-five: .. show full overview
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The Library of Rare Colors
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The Forbes Pigment Collection at the Harvard Art Museums is a collection of pigments, binders, and other art materials for researchers to use as standards: so they can tell originals .. show full overview
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Blindfold Balancing in the Spinning Space Chair
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The Multi-Axes Rotation and Tilt Device (MART) is used for spatial orientation experiments: it's a chair balanced on a metaphorical knife-edge, powered by precise and fast motors. And my job was to not fall over.
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The Artificial Gravity Lab
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In the Ashton Graybiel Spatial Orientation Laboratory at Brandeis University, there's the Artificial Gravity Facility: otherwise known as the rotating room. No-one's invented futuristic .. show full overview
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The First 3D Color X-Rays
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At the University of Canterbury, in Christchurch, New Zealand, the team at Mars Bioimaging are using detector equipment originally developed for the Large Hadron Collider, and putting it .. show full overview
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Testing A Zip Line That Goes Round Corners
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If you invent a new theme park or amusement ride, how do you test it to make sure it's safe? There's no Federal Bureau of Zip Lines. I visited one of the companies that does just that sort of testing - and, now, inventing.
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How The Netherlands Simulated The Sea Before Computers: The Waterloopbos
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"Build some models" seems obvious: but this is a story of ingenuity, of using natural resources well, and of a country that humans dragged from the sea.
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Australia's Bushfire-Hunting Satellites
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Turns out that trying to precisely detect fire from space is more difficult than "point a camera at it".
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Why this observatory fires lasers at satellites
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NERC's Space Geodesy Facility, hidden away in the English countryside, fires lasers at satellites. Because it turns out that knowing a satellite's position exactly is really, really difficult. More about the Facility: http://sgf.rgo.ac.uk/
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The highway where trucks work like electric trains
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In Lübeck, Germany, there's one of several eHighway test projects: overhead catenary wires, where electric trucks with pantographs can pull power directly from the grid. Thanks to everyone who gave so much time to make this video possible!
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Why Australia bottles up its air
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Every few months, when the wind's blowing in the right direction, a bottle of air is taken from Kennaook / Cape Grim, at the northern tip of Tasmania, and saved for science. Here's how and why.
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It's the Matrix, but for locusts
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At the Department of Collective Behaviour, part of the Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior, researchers are putting locusts into simulated worlds, both virtual and physical, in the .. show full overview
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The largest telescope that will ever be built*
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The asterisk is important. The Extremely Large Telescope, in Paranal, Chile, is probably going to be the largest optical telescope that will ever be constructed. I was invited out .. show full overview

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