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- Link
- https://wyss.harvard.edu
- Category
- Bio-Medical, Science and Technology
- Subject
- Architecture, Biology, Chemistry, Engineering, General Science, Medicine, Physics, Technology
- Medium
- Film/Video, Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Organisations, Podcasting, Streaming/Download
An institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University devoted to research and technology development to create new bioinspired materials and devices with high-impact applications in healthcare, manufacturing, robotics, energy, and sustainable architecture. The Multimedia section of the website offers videos, animations and podcasts. Content is organised into Focus Areas (e.g. 3D Organ Engineering, Molecular Robotics, Synthetic Biology), Technology Areas (e.g. Building Materials, Medical devices, Organs on Chips), Disciplines (from Aging, Architecture, Biochemestry and Design to Materials Science, Medicine and Physics), and Application Areas (e.g. Balance & Motor Control, Cancer, Diabetes, Heart, Kidney, Liver and Lung diseases).
Other Online Moving image Audio
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- Link
- http://www.animations.physics.unsw.edu.au
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Mathematics, Physics
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
Multi-media tutorials for learning and teaching physics at high school, or introductory university levels, founded by the Australian Learning and Teaching Council. The site provides downloadable film clips and animations that teachers can incorporate into their lessons. The structure and navigation of this award-winning resource is explained in What is Physiclips? The scope of the resource comprises: Mechanics, Waves and Sound, and Light. Other resources include Einsteinlight, and Laboratories, which are classroom exercises.
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5VwXQiaY1IKHnc1B7FWSesu6xxg9vU0w
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Astronomy, General Science, Physics
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download, Technology
A series produced by Imperial College London, which looks at different aspects of science in hour-long videos. Themes so far include: Why does Saturn have rings?, What are stars made of? Are we alone? What is between the stars? and What causes auroras?
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- https://futurism.com/
- Category
- Bio-Medical, Science and Technology
- Subject
- Chemistry, Computing, Dentistry, Engineering, General Science, Genetics, Geography, Geology, Mathematics, Medicine, Physics, Psychiatry, Sports Science, Technology
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Producers/Broadcasters, Web Links
A digital media company that reports on the latest ground-breaking discoveries in the fields of science and technology. The content is presented as News, Infographics or Videos, and the themes covered include: Advance Transport (Flying Cars, The Hyperloop, Space Planes, Self-Driving Vehicles, Jetpacks, High-Speed Rail), Hard Science (Astrophysics, Applied Mathematics, Bioinformatics, Quantum Mechanics, Polymer Chemistry, Computational Theory), Artificial Intelligence (Singularity, Machine Learning, Neural Networks, Turing Tests, Speech Recognition, Computer Vision), Earth & Energy (Nuclear Fusion, Hydrogen Fuel Cells, Floating Wind Farms, Electric Cars, Climate Change, Cloud Seeding, Environmental Engineering), Enhanced Humans (Biohacking, CRISPR, NeuroTech, Humanity+, Brain-Controlled Prosthetics, MedTech, Bionics, Augmentation, 3D Printed Organs), Future Society (Universal Basic Income, Workforce Automation, Lab-Grown Meat, Blockchain, Bitcoin, SmartCities, Future Careers, Political Policy), Health & Medicine (Antibiotic Resistance, Vaccines, Lifesaving Clinical Trials and Treatments, New Disease), Off World (SpaceX, Orbital, NASA, International Space Station, Mars Colonization, Micro-Satellites, Fermi Paradox, Interstellar Travel), Robots & Machines (Supercomputers, Drones, 3D Printers, Transformative Gadgets, Humanoid Robots, Quantum Computing), Sci-Fi Visions (Time Travel, Wormholes, Alternate Universes, The Simulation Hypothesis, Moonshots, Artistic Visions of the Future) and Virtuality (Holograms, Augmented Reality, VR Gaming, Sensory Suits, 360-Degree Videos, Digital Simulations).
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- https://www.pbs.org/show/pbs-space-time/
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Astronomy, Physics
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Producers/Broadcasters
A web series hosted by astrophysics professor Matthew O’Dowd which explores abstract concepts in physics and astronomy using a light touch approach. Each episode runs between six and 15 minutes and can be accessed via the Space Time YouTube channel. In Zero-Point Energy Demystified, for example, O’Dowd explains what this type of energy can and can’t do; in Understanding the Uncertainty Principle with Quantum Fourier he describes how "intuitive, large-scale phenomena can give us incredible insights into the extremely unintuitive world of quantum mechanics”.
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- https://faraday.physics.utoronto.ca/PVB/Harrison/Flash/
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Physics
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
Series of Flash animations produced by David M. Harrison of the Department of Physics at the University of Toronto. The animations have been sorted by subject (chaos, quantum mechanics, relativity etc.) and are released under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Generic licence (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- http://www.cityofphysics.com/podcasts.html
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Astronomy, General Science, Physics, Technology
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
This podcast was created to accompany a month-long educational project held in Dublin during 2015. The project was created by Dr Shane Bergin (School of Physics, Trinity College Dublin) and Dr Aoibhinn Ní Shúilleabháin (School Of Mathematics & Statistics, University College Dublin) and aimed to make physics part of Dubliners’ everyday conversation by putting notices, posters and projections on public transport, the sides of buildings etc. in order to spark people’s interest and curiosity. In the podcasts, the City of Physics team introduce a variety of highly-regarded scientists to talk about their inspirations and ideas, covering subject such as how physics fits in with the other sciences, and how to talk and communicate about science to a general audience.
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- Link
- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUWwuHIERdxEdG5pdz3U4UQ
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Chemistry, Engineering, General Science, Physics
- Medium
- Film/Video
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download, Vacancies/Careers
YouTube channel featuring videos from the Department of Chemical Engineering, Imperial College London. The site features lectures, illustrated with slides and diagrams, as well as shorter videos on a range of subjects, from molecular fluid dynamics and flow chemistry to the engineering of molecular systems and carbon capture technology.
Other Online Moving image
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- Link
- http://isciencemag.co.uk/
- Category
- Science and Technology
- Subject
- Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, General Science, Physics, Technology
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Blogs, Journals, Podcasting, Reviews, Streaming/Download
This website is produced by post-graduate students at Imperial College, studying for an MSc in Science Communication and Science Media Production. It features news, reviews, blogs and a magazine which appears three times a year. The site’s audio and video resources include podcasts, interviews and news items covering a broad range of scientific subjects. A useful source of news and information for science undergraduates.
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- Link
- https://www.bas.ac.uk/project/british-antarctic-oral-history-project/
- Category
- Bio-Medical, Science and Technology
- Subject
- General Science, Physics
- Medium
- Radio/Sound
- Type of resource
- Streaming/Download
This resource features interviews gathered by the British Antarctic Survey Archives Service. The audio clips are freely available and are accompanied by transcripts. The focus is on those involved with polar science, especially people who worked for, or closely with, Operation Tabarin, 1943–45, Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey (FIDS), 1945–61, and British Antarctic Survey (BAS), 1962–present. Interviewees include members of the scientific teams such as meteorologists, geologists and ionosphericists, as well members of the technical and support teams such as radio operators, pilots, medics, mechanics and cooks. Searching can be done by subject keyword, location and person name.