KidzTube
Welcome
Login / Register

Search Results: "mit engineering programs bachelors"

All   Most Recent   Most Viewed  


  • 04:38 The MIT Intelligence Quest

    The MIT Intelligence Quest

    419 views / 0 likes - added

    The MIT Intelligence Quest seeks to discover the foundations of human and machine intelligence and drive the development of technological tools that can positively influence society. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/mit-launches-intelligence-quest-02

  • 03:08 Making Medallions at MIT

    Making Medallions at MIT

    496 views / 0 likes - added

    Each year, the Department of Materials Science and Engineering gives its graduating students a bronze medallion of the MIT seal. These medallions are entirely prepared, cast, and finished by students in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laborato

  • 04:38 Curious about Curling? Meet the MIT club

    Curious about Curling? Meet the MIT club

    419 views / 0 likes - added

    For many people, including those that participate, the sport of curling is somewhat of a mystery. "There's a lot of science behind curling, including some that's actually not so well understood," says graduate student Nate Bailey, a member of the MIT Curl

  • 09:21 Mass-Producing Ice Cream with Food Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #39

    Mass-Producing Ice Cream with Food Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #39

    334 views / 0 likes - added

    In this episode, we looked at food engineering. We explored how foods capacity to spoil makes it a unique challenge from an engineering viewpoint. We saw how many branches of engineering come into play to process ingredients, ensure safety for consumers,

  • 02:49 Vision-free MIT Cheetah

    Vision-free MIT Cheetah

    655 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT's Cheetah 3 robot can now leap and gallop across rough terrain, climb a staircase littered with debris, and quickly recover its balance when suddenly yanked or shoved, all while essentially blind. Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/blind-cheetah-rob

  • 01:45 Backflipping MIT Mini Cheetah

    Backflipping MIT Mini Cheetah

    561 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT'S new mini cheetah robot is the first four-legged robot to do a backflip. At only 20 pounds the limber quadruped can bend and swing its legs wide, enabling it to walk either right side up or upside down. The robot can also trot over uneven terrain abo

  • 11:47 Changing the Blueprints of Life - Genetic Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #38

    Changing the Blueprints of Life - Genetic Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #38

    337 views / 0 likes - added

    Can we change the blueprints of life? This week we are exploring that question with genetic engineering. Well discuss how selective breeding can improve agricultural practices, and the potential DNA-level engineering could have on other fields of engineer

  • 09:00 The History of Chemical Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #5

    The History of Chemical Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #5

    338 views / 0 likes - added

    Today well cover the fourth and final of our core disciplines of engineering: chemical engineering. Well talk about its history and evolution going from soda ash competitions to oil refineries and renewable energies. Well also discuss some newer and emerg

  • 03:27 Tunnel Vision: The Borderline Mural Project at MIT

    Tunnel Vision: The Borderline Mural Project at MIT

    571 views / 0 likes - added

    During the 2017 spring semester a group of students organized to design and paint interactive murals covering a 200-foot long stretch of wall in the tunnel system located under the campus of MIT. The interactive portion comes in the form of augmented real

  • 11:35 Popular Computer Engineering & the End of Moore's Law: Crash Course Engineering #35

    Computer Engineering & the End of Moore's Law: Crash Course Engineering #35

    1,185 views / 0 likes - added

    This week were exploring a field of engineering that is essential to how youre watching this video: computers and computer engineering. Well explain differences between hardware and software, how engineers are working on making computers smaller and more

  • 10:01 To The Moon & Mars - Aerospace Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #34

    To The Moon & Mars - Aerospace Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #34

    345 views / 1 likes - added

    This week were exploring aerospace engineering and its two main fields: aeronautical engineering and astronautical engineering. Well explore life & buoyancy, propulsion systems, and the challenges of managing the human body in space.Crash Course Engineeri

  • 18:05 This is what an 1869 MIT entrance exam looks like

    This is what an 1869 MIT entrance exam looks like

    586 views / 0 likes - added

    Explore the foundation of algebra at https://brilliant.org/tibees/ View this exam:https://libraries.mit.edu/archives/exhibits/exam/algebra.html MIT exam archives: https://libraries.mit.edu/archives/exhibits/exam/ In this video I look at the algebra sectio

  • 01:31 Popular Soft autonomous earthworm robot at MIT

    Soft autonomous earthworm robot at MIT

    915 views / 0 likes - added

    Earthworms creep along the ground by alternately squeezing and stretching muscles along the length of their bodies, inching forward with each wave of contractions. Snails and sea cucumbers also use this mechanism, called peristalsis, to get around, and ou

    Featured
  • 01:21 MIT Robot Learns How to Play Jenga

    MIT Robot Learns How to Play Jenga

    503 views / 0 likes - added

    Using machine-learning and sensory hardware, Alberto Rodriguez, assistant professor of mechanical engineering, and members of MIT's MCube lab have developed a robot that is learning how to play the game Jenga®. The technology could be used in robots f

  • 10:36 Instructions & Programs: Crash Course Computer Science #8

    Instructions & Programs: Crash Course Computer Science #8

    639 views / 1 likes - added

    Take the 2017 PBS Digital Studios Survey: http://surveymonkey.com/r/pbsds2017. Today we’re going to take our first baby steps from hardware into software! Using that CPU we built last episode we’re going to run some instructions and walk you through how a

  • 11:02 How Engineering Robots Works: Crash Course Engineering #33

    How Engineering Robots Works: Crash Course Engineering #33

    485 views / 0 likes - added

    In this episode we looked at robots and the engineering principles of robots. We learned how robots use sensors to interpret their environment, how actuators and effectors allow a robot to manipulate the objects around it to accomplish a task, and how com

  • The History of Electrical Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #4

    The History of Electrical Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #4

    386 views / 1 likes - added

    Next stop on our tour of engineerings major fields: electrical engineering. In this episode well explore the history of telecommunications, electric power and lighting, and computers. Well introduce topics like magnetism, electrical conduction, telegraphy

  • 07:25 The World's Most Dangerous Engineering Mistakes | Massive Engineering Mistakes

    The World's Most Dangerous Engineering Mistakes | Massive Engineering Mistakes

    423 views / 0 likes - added

    Check out some of the biggest and most dangerous engineering mistakes made throughout the world such as the Leaning Tower of Pisa and Venice's MOSE. Subscribe to Discovery UK for more great clips:http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=Discove

  • MIT Physics: Spinning Bike Wheel and Conservation of Angular Momentum

    MIT Physics: Spinning Bike Wheel and Conservation of Angular Momentum

    183 views / 0 likes - added

    When Ryan spins a bike wheel, nothing crazy happens. But something weird happens when he flips it over - watch and learn as he shows and explains why.----------Find us online!Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/MITK12Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/MITK12Vi

  • 11:29 Popular Introduction to Programs Data Types and Variables

    Introduction to Programs Data Types and Variables

    710 views / 0 likes - added

    Writing a basic program. Basics of data types, variables and conditional statements

  • 01:48 Popular MIT cheetah robot lands the running jump

    MIT cheetah robot lands the running jump

    1,033 views / 2 likes - added

    In a leap for robotic development, the MIT researchers who built a robotic cheetah have now trained it to see and jump over hurdles as it runs — making this the first four-legged robot to run and jump over obstacles autonomously. (Learn more: http:/

  • 03:46 Popular How MIT Builds Cities Using Lego and Augmented Reality | Science of Teams | WIRED

    How MIT Builds Cities Using Lego and Augmented Reality | Science of Teams | WIRED

    776 views / 0 likes - added

    The MIT Media Lab is using innovation to boil efficient teamwork down to a science. With an enhanced ability to communicate across teams, MIT is creating a workplace that shares ideas in unprecedented ways. The Changing Places group at MIT tackles large c

  • 10:04 The Hardest Exam I Ever Took at MIT in Physics

    The Hardest Exam I Ever Took at MIT in Physics

    583 views / 0 likes - added

    You can learn more at https://kiwico.com/physicsgirl to check out a special offer from KiwiCo!Check out Toby's channel, Tibees: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I4XdXRPHhqM where we attempt an MIT entrance exam from 1876 Here's a link if you want to see th

  • 08:05 Sal Khan Has Conversation With MIT Dean Of Admissions

    Sal Khan Has Conversation With MIT Dean Of Admissions

    606 views / 0 likes - added

    Sal Khan has conversation with MIT Dean of Admissions Stu Schmill.

  • 01:29 MIT Scientists Create Synthetic Mucus in a Lab

    MIT Scientists Create Synthetic Mucus in a Lab

    231 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT created polymers replicating the structure of mucins, the protein building blocks of mucus. Heres why thats a big deal.

  • 00:50 Blackest Black Material To Date | MIT Engineers

    Blackest Black Material To Date | MIT Engineers

    342 views / 0 likes - added

    This Is The New Blackest Material In The World, Even Blacker Than Vantablack! Built from carbon nanotubes, the material reportedly absorbs 99.995 of light, and its creators say it's 10 times blacker than any other existing material. #blackest #black #blac

  • 01:32 MIT's new self-inflation technology

    MIT's new self-inflation technology

    568 views / 0 likes - added

    At MIT, a team of scientists and designers have come up with a technique that allows objects to self-inflate. It could be be useful in medicine, flat-pack furniture, or even space travel. SUBSCRIBE: https://goo.gl/kdDpXu FOLLOW QUARTZ: Facebook: https://g

  • 03:51 Popular Can You Solve This MIT Admissions Question? Geometry Problem, 1869

    Can You Solve This MIT Admissions Question? Geometry Problem, 1869

    945 views / 0 likes - added

    The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is one of the top ranked universities in the world. This question appeared on its admissions exam nearly 150 years ago. "The perpendicular dropped from the vertex of the right angle upon the hypotenuse divid

  • 02:11 This House Was Built In Just 36 Hours | Impossible Engineering

    This House Was Built In Just 36 Hours | Impossible Engineering

    518 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c And it only cost $185! Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering/ More of the Impossible! http://www.sciencechannel.com/tv-shows/impossible-engine

  • 10:35 Popular Software Engineering: Crash Course Computer Science #16

    Software Engineering: Crash Course Computer Science #16

    1,022 views / 0 likes - added

    Today, we’re going to talk about how HUGE programs with millions of lines of code like Microsoft Office are built. Programs like these are way too complicated for a single person, but instead require teams of programmers using the tools and best practices

  • 01:56 Popular The New World of Human Genetic Engineering

    The New World of Human Genetic Engineering

    969 views / 0 likes - added

    Tune in and join the conversation during the premiere of "CRISPR in Context: The New World of Human Genetic Engineering" on Friday, October 25th at 8pm EST.PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONIts happened. The first children genetically engineered with the powerful DNA-ed

  • 10:03 This MIT Engineer Built His Own Bionic Leg

    This MIT Engineer Built His Own Bionic Leg

    369 views / 0 likes - added

    At MIT's Media Lab, researchers are developing prosthetic limbs that users can control with their minds, making a robotic foot move as seamlessly as a biological one. Video by Alan Jeffries -------- Like this video? Subscribe to Bloomberg on YouTube: http

  • 04:21 Popular The Disaster That Changed Engineering: The Hyatt Regency Collapse

    The Disaster That Changed Engineering: The Hyatt Regency Collapse

    1,108 views / 0 likes - added

    Today's guest video is from Grady at Practical Engineering! Go subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/user/gradyhillhouse The Hyatt Regency Hotel collapse was a disaster that changed engineering: it's taught in colleges and universities as a way to make it cl

  • 01:46 This MIT robot has real fish schooled

    This MIT robot has real fish schooled

    485 views / 0 likes - added

    Scientists at MIT have released a robotic fish in the Pacific Ocean to observe real fish in their natural habitat. It's a major achievement in soft robotics. It's driven by a modified Super Nintendo controller. And most importantly, other fish aren't scar

  • 02:08 Watch This 1940s Robotic Tortoise Navigate A Room By Itself | Impossible Engineering

    Watch This 1940s Robotic Tortoise Navigate A Room By Itself | Impossible Engineering

    607 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c The "Tortoise" was built by William Grey Walter in 1948 and used sensors for light and movement to form a simple nervous system. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.co

  • 02:01 The MIT cyborg collecting his memories on video

    The MIT cyborg collecting his memories on video

    431 views / 0 likes - added

    Data could be the future of memory. A team of MIT researchers developed a machine that collects our most personal data: memories. Human “cyborg” Neo Mohsenvand uses an EEG cap, camera, and signal tracking wrist band to record his life on video. The data f

  • 18:22 Engineering with Origami

    Engineering with Origami

    502 views / 0 likes - added

    Origami is inspiring a plethora of new engineering designs. Try yourself: https://ve42.co/Origami Thanks Audible! Start listening with a 30-day trial and your first audiobook, plus two Audible Originals free when you go to https://audible.com/veritasium o

  • 11:05 Reversibility & Irreversibility: Crash Course Engineering #8

    Reversibility & Irreversibility: Crash Course Engineering #8

    303 views / 0 likes - added

    How do we design the most efficient machines and processes? Today well try to figure that out as we discuss heat & work, reversibility & irreversibility, and how to use efficiency to measure a system. Crash Course Engineering is produced in association wi

  • 10:28 The Engineering of the Drinking Bird

    The Engineering of the Drinking Bird

    583 views / 0 likes - added

    Bill reveals the operation and engineering design underlying the famous drinking bird toy. In this video he explores the role played by the water the bird "drinks," shows what is under the bird's hat and demonstrates that it can operate using heat from a

  • 10:27 Why It's So Hard To Make Better Batteries: Crash Course Engineering #32

    Why It's So Hard To Make Better Batteries: Crash Course Engineering #32

    343 views / 0 likes - added

    There are batteries powering so many parts of our everyday lives, so today were going to talk about how they work and how we can make them better. Well explain how they provide power by discharging ions between a cathode and an anode, and how reversing th

  • 01:23 Popular What Is Real Engineering?

    What Is Real Engineering?

    1,140 views / 0 likes - added

    Why choose engineering as a career path? I believe engineers have the power to make this world a better place to live. This video was created to inspire current and future engineers to continue making this world a better place. Join the facebook page: htt

    Featured
  • 11:28 Popular RMS Titanic: Fascinating Engineering Facts

    RMS Titanic: Fascinating Engineering Facts

    1,329 views / 5 likes - added

    Bill shares fascinating images and information gleaned from the 1909 to 1911 editions of the Journal The Engineer. It includes photos of the construction of the Titanic and its twin the Olympic, the launching of these Olympic-class ships, and accidents th

  • 08:37 The Brilliant Engineering of FIRST FLIGHT !

    The Brilliant Engineering of FIRST FLIGHT !

    406 views / 0 likes - added

    When you examine the Wright Flyer, the first successful flight closely you will be amazed by the numerous ingenious technologies these high school dropouts developed 100 years ago. Their design was so complete that even the current modern aircraft use the

  • 01:37 Popular Engineering & Curiosity

    Engineering & Curiosity

    1,014 views / 1 likes - added

    Hey everybody. This is not a regular Kurzgesagt video. We made this clip for the National Academy of Engineerings video contest. http://www.nae.edu/e4u/ The goal of the contest was to make a video about how engineering changed our lifes to the better. Thi

  • 09:11 How To Become An Engineer: Crash Course Engineering #45

    How To Become An Engineer: Crash Course Engineering #45

    352 views / 0 likes - added

    Hopefully this course has gotten you excited about all the things we can do with engineering. If so, today were going to try to help you answer a very important question: how do you become an engineer? What are the steps? What kinds of careers can you pur

  • 12:06 My Path into Physics (at MIT)

    My Path into Physics (at MIT)

    571 views / 0 likes - added

    Check out Jabril's video here on SEFD Science → https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=szEsTDmVIkU CuriosityStream: http://curiositystream.com/physicsgirl Dianna Cowern runs Physics Girl full time. Here she discusses her path to studying physics and doing physic

  • 01:03 MIT Cheetah 2 Compilation

    MIT Cheetah 2 Compilation

    349 views / 0 likes - added

  • 08:51 Popular How to save 51B lives for 68 cents with simple Engineering

    How to save 51B lives for 68 cents with simple Engineering

    780 views / 0 likes - added

    Using the power of engineering and brilliant inventions to save lives!!! Great times collab-ing with Bill and Melinda Gates! You should check out the Gates Annual Letter here: http://b-gat.es/2lhhtmJ Pre-order a paper microscope here- https://www.foldscop

    Featured
  • 10:44 Popular Heat Engines, Refrigerators, & Cycles: Crash Course Engineering #11

    Heat Engines, Refrigerators, & Cycles: Crash Course Engineering #11

    892 views / 0 likes - added

    Cycles are a big deal in engineering. Today well explain what they are and how theyre used in heat engines, refrigerators, and heat pumps. Well also discuss phase diagrams and the power of using renewable energy resourcesCrash Course Engineering is produc

  • 02:51 Physics and Engineering - Summer of STEM - Triangle Building Blocks and Lego Parachutes

    Physics and Engineering - Summer of STEM - Triangle Building Blocks and Lego Parachutes

    532 views / 0 likes - added

    Physics and Engineering! This week we make triangle building blocks and lego parachutes! Physics Book: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B-GbYsz_QH2WeGtsMjZGcTlVM3c/view?usp=sharing Printable Board Game and Stickers: https://drive.google.com/drive/u/1/fold

  • 05:11 Build the Best Solar Oven Ever! | Engineering Project

    Build the Best Solar Oven Ever! | Engineering Project

    372 views / 0 likes - added

    Mister Brown and Squeaks decide to design a solar oven, so they can cook their lunch while they play outside!----------Love SciShow Kids and want to help support it? Become a Patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishowIf you have a question for Jes

  • 06:12 The Engineering Inside Noise-Canceling Headphones

    The Engineering Inside Noise-Canceling Headphones

    268 views / 0 likes - added

    The engineering inside noise-canceling headphones is rather intricate. Let's see how.Check out https://www.pcbway.com/ for all kinds of PCBs, easy ordering, and quick delivery.Take a look at their PCB Assembly, for an inexpensive population of the compone

  • 04:02 Origami: Art, Engineering or Both?

    Origami: Art, Engineering or Both?

    387 views / 0 likes - added

    How can one sheet of folding paper inform engineering and the future of space travel?Subscribe so you never miss an episode: https://bit.ly/3mOfd77More info below Jinkyu JK Yang sees endless possibilities in a single sheet of paper. The aeronautics and as

  • 09:57 Popular How Seawater Sabotages Ships: Crash Course Engineering #43

    How Seawater Sabotages Ships: Crash Course Engineering #43

    1,134 views / 0 likes - added

    This week were headed out to sea for some marine engineering. How do we design ships to handle aquatic environments? How do we deal with marine life and corrosion and all of the other problems that come with engineering in the ocean? How can large maritim

  • 18:55 The Insane Engineering of the SR-71 Blackbird

    The Insane Engineering of the SR-71 Blackbird

    556 views / 1 likes - added

    Get a year of both Nebula and Curiosity Stream for just 11.99 here: http://www.CuriosityStream.com/realengineering and using the code, "realengineering"New streaming platform: https://watchnebula.com/Vlog channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMet4qY3

  • 09:42 Building a Desalination Plant from Scratch: Crash Course Engineering #44

    Building a Desalination Plant from Scratch: Crash Course Engineering #44

    317 views / 0 likes - added

    An essential part of engineering is engineering design. Today well see how design synthesis helps you put together the components of a process and decide what techniques are needed to solve your problem. Well explain the need test things on a smaller scal

  • 01:11 MIT Researchers Develop Glow-In-the-Dark Plants

    MIT Researchers Develop Glow-In-the-Dark Plants

    176 views / 0 likes - added

    Someday you might not flip a switch, but rather a branch to illuminate your home.

  • 08:36 Heat Transfer: Crash Course Engineering #14

    Heat Transfer: Crash Course Engineering #14

    374 views / 0 likes - added

    Today were talking about heat transfer and the different mechanisms behind it. Well explore conduction, the thermal conductivity of materials, convection, boundary layers, and radiation. Crash Course Engineering is produced in association with PBS Digital

  • 01:52 11-Year-Old Gets 3D-Printed Hands After Dad Meets Engineering Student in Uber

    11-Year-Old Gets 3D-Printed Hands After Dad Meets Engineering Student in Uber

    582 views / 0 likes - added

    An 11-year-old girl born with a one finger on each hand has gotten a new pair of 3D-printed hands. Her father drives an Uber and after picking up a Notre Dame engineering student one night, the stranger offered to help the driver's daughter by designing h

  • 08:51 The Mighty Power of Nanomaterials: Crash Course Engineering #23

    The Mighty Power of Nanomaterials: Crash Course Engineering #23

    378 views / 0 likes - added

    Just how small are nanomaterials? And what can we do with stuff that small? Today well discuss some special properties of nanomaterials, how some can change at different sizes, and the difference between engineered nanomaterials and ones that occur natura

  • 10:47 The Insane Engineering of Tokyo's First Supertall Skyscraper

    The Insane Engineering of Tokyo's First Supertall Skyscraper

    164 views / 0 likes - added

    Building tall in Japan isn't easy.Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks - https://www.masterworks.art/theb1mThis video contains paid promotion for Masterworks. Purchase shares in great masterpi

  • 32:14 Popular Engineering Compilation: Crash Course Kids

    Engineering Compilation: Crash Course Kids

    744 views / 0 likes - added

    Maybe you'd like to just hear about one topic for a while. We understand. Thus, we've created our Compilation Series. In this first (and longest) compilation video, we look at some of our videos about Engineering. Sabrina helps us to understand how engine

  • 10:39 How Not to Set Your Pizza on Fire: Crash Course Engineering #15

    How Not to Set Your Pizza on Fire: Crash Course Engineering #15

    309 views / 0 likes - added

    Today were going to explain how exchangers...exchange heat. Well look at concentric tubes, finned tubes, plate heat exchangers, and shell-and-tube heat exchangers. And well look at some equations to help us sort through heat transfer and decide what heat

  • 11:02 Cheese, Catastrophes, & Process Control: Crash Course Engineering #25

    Cheese, Catastrophes, & Process Control: Crash Course Engineering #25

    358 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineering, like life, could really use a lot more cheese. This week we are looking at a cheese factory in Toronto and what it can teach us about process control systems. Well explore feedforward and feedback systems, and see how integrating them both wi

  • 19:42 The Insane Engineering of the Perseverance Rover

    The Insane Engineering of the Perseverance Rover

    300 views / 0 likes - added

    Get a year of both Nebula and Curiosity Stream for just 14.79 here: http://www.CuriosityStream.com/realengineering and using the code, "realengineering" Watch this video on ad free on Nebula: Vlog channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMet4qY3027v8Kjp

  • 04:09 Mit der FLIEGENDEN BADEWANNE zum BÄCKER! | Bemannte Drohne #4

    Mit der FLIEGENDEN BADEWANNE zum BÄCKER! | Bemannte Drohne #4

    546 views / 0 likes - added

    Wer träumt nicht auch davon, in seiner Badewanne einkaufen zu fliegen? :D Besonderen Dank an Alex und Valli von Exabotix! Wenn ihr uns bei unseren Projekt mithelfen wollt, freuen wir uns über eure Unterstützung auf Patreon: https://www.patr

  • 09:03 Popular Are GMOs Good or Bad? Genetic Engineering & Our Food

    Are GMOs Good or Bad? Genetic Engineering & Our Food

    1,065 views / 2 likes - added

    Are GMOs bad for your health? Or is this fear unfounded? Support us on Patreon so we can make more videos (and get cool stuff in return): https://www.patreon.com/Kurzgesagt?ty=h Kurzgesagt merch here: http://bit.ly/1P1hQIH Get the music of the video here:

    Featured
  • 09:54 How the Leaning Tower of Pisa Was Saved: Crash Course Engineering #40

    How the Leaning Tower of Pisa Was Saved: Crash Course Engineering #40

    389 views / 0 likes - added

    This week were going underground to explore geotechnical and seismic engineering. Well look at how structures connect to the ground and transmit loads through their foundations, and how those foundations need to provide a high bearing capacity. Well see h

  • 05:17 Popular The Engineering Process: Crash Course Kids #12.2

    The Engineering Process: Crash Course Kids #12.2

    6,241 views / 15 likes - added

    So, how do we go about being engineers? In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina talks to us about the Engineering Process and why we should do things in order, as well as many of the questions we should ask along the way. This first series is based

    Featured
  • 31:23 The Insane Engineering of James Webb Telescope

    The Insane Engineering of James Webb Telescope

    194 views / 0 likes - added

    Get the CuriosityStream x Nebula bundle deal for just 11.59 until December 24th https://curiositystream.com/realengineering New streaming platform: https://watchnebula.com/ Vlog channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMet4qY3027v8KjpaDtDx-g Patreon: ht

  • 09:30 Popular YouTube Couldn't Exist Without Communications & Signal Processing: Crash Course Engineering #42

    YouTube Couldn't Exist Without Communications & Signal Processing: Crash Course Engineering #42

    1,049 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineering helped make this video possible. This week well look at how its possible for you to watch this video with the fundamentals of signal processing. Well explore things from Morse Code, to problems like bandwidth capacity and noise, to how we arri

  • 03:18 Popular Engineering Games: Crash Course Kids #29.2

    Engineering Games: Crash Course Kids #29.2

    2,115 views / 7 likes - added

    So how can a game teach us about engineering? Pretty easily! When you're trying to solve a game, or a puzzle, or whatever, you will have a bunch of variables. The trick is knowing how to change one variable at a time to see what changes. In this episode o

  • 12:55 Why We Can't Invent a Perfect Engine: Crash Course Engineering #10

    Why We Can't Invent a Perfect Engine: Crash Course Engineering #10

    674 views / 0 likes - added

    Weve introduced the 0th and 1st laws of thermodynamics, so now its time to move on to the second law and how we came to understand it. Well explain the differences between the first and second law, and well talk about the Carnot cycle and why we can never

  • 09:51 Smart Tattoos & Tiny Robots: Crash Course Engineering #37

    Smart Tattoos & Tiny Robots: Crash Course Engineering #37

    325 views / 0 likes - added

    This week we are exploring biodevices and the part they play in the healthcare world. Well look at the challenges of implantable biodevices, like biocompatibility, power and connectivity, packaging, structural design, delivery systems, and device manageme

  • 05:44 The Engineering Secrets of the World's Toughest Beetle

    The Engineering Secrets of the World's Toughest Beetle

    241 views / 0 likes - added

    Go to http://Brilliant.org/SciShow to try their Scientific Thinking course. The first 200 subscribers get 20% off an annual Premium subscription.This arthropod may look modest, but it actually used brilliant engineering to become the worlds most resilient

  • 10:10 Skyscrapers, Statics, & Dynamics: Crash Course Engineering #26

    Skyscrapers, Statics, & Dynamics: Crash Course Engineering #26

    274 views / 0 likes - added

    What if you were on a high floor of a skyscraper and the building started swaying? Today well explore statics and dynamics, and what they mean for the structures we design. We look at the idea of static equilibrium, forces, and torques, and how free body

  • Popular Metals & Ceramics: Crash Course Engineering #19

    Metals & Ceramics: Crash Course Engineering #19

    1,153 views / 0 likes - added

    Today well explore more about two of the three main types of materials that we use as engineers: metals and ceramics. Well discuss properties of metals, alloys, ceramics, clay, cement, and glass-ceramic materials. Well also look at the applications of our

  • 05:16 One of the most epic engineering feats in history - Alex Gendler

    One of the most epic engineering feats in history - Alex Gendler

    487 views / 0 likes - added

    Dig into the history of the construction of the iconic Brooklyn Bridge and how John Roebling designed a hybrid suspension system to build it. --In the mid-19th century, suspension bridges were collapsing all across Europe. Their industrial cables frayed a

  • 11:16 Mass Separation: Crash Course Engineering #17

    Mass Separation: Crash Course Engineering #17

    417 views / 0 likes - added

    It can be really important to separate out chemicals for all kinds of reasons. Today were going over three different processes engineers use to achieve that separation: distillation, which separates substances based on their different boiling points; liqu

  • 10:16 Why Moving People is Complicated: Crash Course Engineering #41

    Why Moving People is Complicated: Crash Course Engineering #41

    300 views / 0 likes - added

    Transportation is a big part of our world and engineers play a big role in making it happen. Today well explore how transportation systems are designed and some things transportation engineers have to take into consideration, like signaling, user behavior

  • 11:10 Biomaterials: Crash Course Engineering #24

    Biomaterials: Crash Course Engineering #24

    370 views / 0 likes - added

    Weve talked about different materials engineers use to build things in the world, but theres a special category of materials they turn to when building things to go inside our bodies. In this episode well explore the world biomaterials like titanium and t

  • 10:06 The Law of Conservation: Crash Course Engineering #7

    The Law of Conservation: Crash Course Engineering #7

    301 views / 0 likes - added

    Today Shini explains the law of conservation, beginning with simple, steady-state systems. Well discuss conversion and yield, accumulation, and how generation and consumption can affect how much accumulation there is in a system.This episode is sponsored

  • 10:39 Silicon, Semiconductors, & Solar Cells: Crash Course Engineering #22

    Silicon, Semiconductors, & Solar Cells: Crash Course Engineering #22

    298 views / 0 likes - added

    Today were looking at silicon, and how introducing small amounts of other elements allow silicon layers to conduct currents, turning them into semiconductors. Well explore how putting two different types N and P semiconductors together gives us electrical

  • 16:04 Popular Genetic Engineering Will Change Everything Forever – CRISPR

    Genetic Engineering Will Change Everything Forever – CRISPR

    1,085 views / 1 likes - added

    Designer babies, the end of diseases, genetically modified humans that never age. Outrageous things that used to be science fiction are suddenly becoming reality. The only thing we know for sure is that things will change irreversibly. Support us on Patre

    Featured
  • 09:10 Popular Stress, Strain & Quicksand: Crash Course Engineering #12

    Stress, Strain & Quicksand: Crash Course Engineering #12

    779 views / 0 likes - added

    Today were talking all about fluid mechanics! Well look at different scales that we work with as engineers, mass and energy transfers, the no-slip condition, stress and strain, Newtons law of viscosity, Reynolds number, and more!Crash Course Engineering i

  • 05:14 This Is the Engineering You’d Need to Cross the Pacific Ocean | The Swim

    This Is the Engineering You’d Need to Cross the Pacific Ocean | The Swim

    469 views / 0 likes - added

    The secrets to converting a twenty-meter racing yacht into a vessel seaworthy of a historic voyage? Reverse osmosis and fiberglass batteries, of course. Could the Biggest Ocean Recording Ever Made Redefine Marine Science? - https://youtu.be/-GWVmk-U-kk Fo

  • 10:12 How to Engineer Health - Drug Discovery & Delivery: Crash Course Engineering #36

    How to Engineer Health - Drug Discovery & Delivery: Crash Course Engineering #36

    343 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineers are problem solvers, and our own health is full of problems to be engineered. In this episode we discuss drug discovery and drug delivery. Well explore everything from classical and reverse pharmacology to the new field of synthetic biology. Wel

  • 05:24 Engineering the Perfect Pop

    Engineering the Perfect Pop

    538 views / 0 likes - added

    Using scissors, tape, and reams of creativity, Matthew Reinhart engineers paper to bend, fold, and transform into fantastic creatures, structures and locales. By adjusting the angles of folds and the depth of layers, Reinhart animates his subjects to tell

  • 02:02 Engineering the Most Annoying Sound Ever

    Engineering the Most Annoying Sound Ever

    658 views / 0 likes - added

    Alarms come in many forms; from the gentle ping of a text message notification to the wake-up wail of a bedside clock, these sounds are a part of our lives. That's why an alarm that could actually save your life needs to be so attention-grabbing—and inten

  • 05:22 Reverse Engineering Europa

    Reverse Engineering Europa

    388 views / 0 likes - added

    http:/www.sciencefriday.comIt could be at least 15 years before NASA lands a mission on Europa, one of Jupiter's moons, to search for signs of life beneath its icy crust. In the mean time, a team led by astrobiologist Kevin Hand of NASA's Jet Propulsion L

  • 07:35 The Engineering Puzzle of Storing Trillions of Bits in your Smartphone / SSD using Quantum Mechanics

    The Engineering Puzzle of Storing Trillions of Bits in your Smartphone / SSD using Quantum Mechanics

    178 views / 0 likes - added

    It's a puzzle as to how your smartphone or the solid-state drive in your laptop can store gigabytes to terabytes of data by the click of a button! It's amazing that your devices work flawlessly, and the information doesn't leak out. In this video, we'll l

  • 07:58 Unit Vectors and Engineering Notation

    Unit Vectors and Engineering Notation

    493 views / 0 likes - added

    Using unit vectors to represent the components of a vector More free lessons at: http://www.khanacademy.org/video?v=2QjdcVTgTTA

  • 04:13 Without These Engineering Tricks Spacecraft Would Die Out There

    Without These Engineering Tricks Spacecraft Would Die Out There

    433 views / 0 likes - added

    Space is an extreme environment. With the severe temperatures, endless debris, and harsh radiation, how do spacecraft survive? Is There Space for 12,000 More Satellites Up There? - https://youtu.be/BMoH_zr2y8A For more epic stories of innovation that shap

  • 14:29 The Engineering Marvel That is the Sewing Machine!

    The Engineering Marvel That is the Sewing Machine!

    306 views / 0 likes - added

    Today we are looking at the inside of a sewing machine to figure out how exactly it works. How does it sew two fabrics together without passing a needle through to both sides?Check out all of our socials: https://linktr.ee/tkorsocialsSend Us Some Mail:TKO

  • 09:37 How does this SSD store 8TB of Data?  ||  Inside the Engineering of Solid-State Drive Architecture

    How does this SSD store 8TB of Data? || Inside the Engineering of Solid-State Drive Architecture

    248 views / 0 likes - added

    Imagine storing every single video, movie, and picture you have ever seen in your entire life on a single solid-state drive. Well, these high-end solid-state drives [30TB] can do that. But how can SSDs organize so much information? Well in this video we a

  • 05:08 All the Engineering in a Driverless Car | WIRED

    All the Engineering in a Driverless Car | WIRED

    132 views / 0 likes - added

    If an automated car was only designed to transport goods, what would that look like? In theory, it wouldn't need windows, or steering wheels, or seats. Nuro is doing just that, they've engineered a vehicle that's sole purpose is delivering things. How did

  • 04:05 Teenage engineering OP1 - Live looping  [Thoj]

    Teenage engineering OP1 - Live looping [Thoj]

    412 views / 0 likes - added

    Hope you will enjoy my first live with the OP-1 Listen to the final version: https://soundcloud.com/thojj/thoj-with-you Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Thoj.music/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/__thoj__/ :)

  • 03:39 How Can We Make The Perfect City? ft. Real Engineering

    How Can We Make The Perfect City? ft. Real Engineering

    608 views / 2 likes - added

    Could we create the perfect city? Let's find out! Watch more: Why Planes Crash ►► https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZ_jGGD-DX8 Subscribe: https://bit.ly/SubLifeNoggin | Get your exclusive Life Noggin merch: http://keeponthinking.co Support Life Noggin on P

  • 23:31 Engineering the Worlds Fastest Solar Race Cars

    Engineering the Worlds Fastest Solar Race Cars

    443 views / 0 likes - added

    Welcome to LIGHT SPEED! Join Derek Muller of Veritasium to meet the minds (and understand the physics!) behind the worlds most advanced solar vehicles. Theyll race 2,000 miles across the Australian Outback to test their tech and teamwork, risking life and

  • 04:19 Bringing a fossil to life: Reverse engineering locomotion

    Bringing a fossil to life: Reverse engineering locomotion

    449 views / 0 likes - added

    You can tell a lot about an animal from the way it moves, which is why scientists have been recreating the movements of an extinct crocodile-like creature called Orobates pabsti. Orobates lived well before the time of the dinosaurs and is what’s cal

  • 01:53 Plants can grow their own glow-in-the-dark cotton, no genetic engineering required

    Plants can grow their own glow-in-the-dark cotton, no genetic engineering required

    487 views / 0 likes - added

    Method could pave the way for new smart clothing. Learn more: http://scim.ag/2xBTrgl Read the research ($): http://scim.ag/2xB3L8f

  • 04:27 SpaceX Falcon Heavy- Elon Musk's Engineering Masterpiece

    SpaceX Falcon Heavy- Elon Musk's Engineering Masterpiece

    440 views / 0 likes - added

    Tens of thousands of spectators made the pilgrimage from across the country & 22 million people around the world on Youtube witnessed the thunderous roar of the SpaceX's new 23-story-tall jumbo rocket as it has blasted off on its first test flight, ca

  • 11:08 Yard Game For the Poor And Rich - Skittles Full Gameplay - Engineering America

    Yard Game For the Poor And Rich - Skittles Full Gameplay - Engineering America

    78 views / 0 likes - added

    Skittles, or what we might call the predecessor to bowling, was extremely popular in the 18th Century. It was played among all classes with several sets of rules depending on where you were from and who you were. It can be extremely complicated, or a simp

  • 17:41 The Engineering Inside Wireless Earbuds || How do Wireless Earbuds and Audio Codecs Work?

    The Engineering Inside Wireless Earbuds || How do Wireless Earbuds and Audio Codecs Work?

    240 views / 0 likes - added

    Let's take apart these wireless earbuds [Apple AirPods 2] and see all the components. Then we'll explore audio codecs and the world of digital audio, and see how it all works.Check out https://www.pcbway.com/ for all kinds of PCBs, easy ordering, and quic

  • 02:17 A light rain can spread soil bacteria far and wide

    A light rain can spread soil bacteria far and wide

    540 views / 1 likes - added

    Using high-resolution imaging, researchers from MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering observed the effect of raindrops falling on dry soil laden with bacteria. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/light-rain-spread-soil-bacteria-0307) Watch more vid

  • 02:55 How to image atoms

    How to image atoms

    140 views / 0 likes - added

    In the basement of MIT.nano there is a specialized microscope able to image materials at the atomic level. In this video we go through each step of how to image the tiny building blocks for all materials: atoms. (Learn more about MIT.nano: https://mitnano

  • 03:27 The language of color

    The language of color

    438 views / 0 likes - added

    Cognitive scientists from MIT and elsewhere have found that people can more easily communicate warmer colors than cool ones. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/analyzing-language-color-0918) Watch more videos from MIT: http://www.youtube.com/user/MITNe

  • 02:34 A new way to mix oil and water

    A new way to mix oil and water

    586 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers in the Varanasi Lab at MIT has developed a way to create nanoscale emulsions, of oil and water, stable enough to last indefinitely, and with no mixing required. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/new-way-mix-oil-and-water-1108) Wa

  • 02:08 Popular Glowing plants provide light to read

    Glowing plants provide light to read

    701 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have been able to induce plants to give off a dim light for nearly four hours. And they believe that, with further optimization, such plants will one day be bright enough to illuminate an entire workspace. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/20

    Featured
  • 00:49 #MacroMonday: Angles

    #MacroMonday: Angles

    366 views / 0 likes - added

    Things aren’t always what they seem . . . or are they? Extreme close-ups often obscure the full picture. Cloaked in mystery, this new video series introduces a variety of objects and moments — found at MIT — that invite you to take a second look. Watch mo

  • 01:57 New method removes micropollutants from water

    New method removes micropollutants from water

    464 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT researchers has developed a new way to clear pollutants from water, even when present in extremely low concentrations. (Learn more about their novel method: http://news.mit.edu/2017/electrochemical-clear-pollutants-water-0510) Watch more vid

  • 02:58 Robo-thread

    Robo-thread

    312 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have developed a magnetically steerable, thread-like robot that can actively glide through narrow, winding pathways, such as the labyrinthine vasculature of the brain. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2019/robot-brain-blood-vessels-0828)Wat

  • 03:36 Possible signs of life on Venus

    Possible signs of life on Venus

    296 views / 0 likes - added

    Scientists at MIT, Cardiff University, and elsewhere have observed what may be signs of life in the clouds of Earth's planetary neighbor, Venus. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/life-venus-phosphine-0914)Watch more videos from MIT: http://www.youtube

  • 01:57 Movable microplatform floating on droplets

    Movable microplatform floating on droplets

    473 views / 0 likes - added

    A new approach to microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), developed by a team of researchers at MIT, could offer a new way of making movable parts with no solid connections between the pieces, potentially eliminating a major source of wear and failure. (Le

  • 03:07 Understanding neural networks

    Understanding neural networks

    282 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT-IBM Watson AI lab research team member David Bau explains how computers show evidence of learning the structure of the physical world.Watch more videos from MIT: http://www.youtube.com/user/MITNewsOffice?sub_confirmation=1The Massachusetts Institute o

  • 00:54 Extracting drinkable water from the air

    Extracting drinkable water from the air

    255 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT and elsewhere have developed a solar-powered device that can extract drinkable water directly from the air even in dry regions. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2020/solar-extracts-drinkable-water-1014) Watch more videos from MIT: http

  • 02:06 How to get conductive gels to stick when wet

    How to get conductive gels to stick when wet

    305 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers at MIT has developed a new way of making polymers adhere to surfaces even with the introduction of moisture, that may enable better biomedical sensors and implants. (Read more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/conductive-gels-stick-wet-0320)Wa

  • 03:37 Scaffolding of the Galaxies

    Scaffolding of the Galaxies

    396 views / 0 likes - added

    In the Center for Theoretical Physics at MIT, researchers develop ideas for describing the fundamental physical laws governing our universe, from perspectives spanning nuclear and particle physics, string theory, gravity, and quantum information. (Learn m

  • 02:13 Sliding through a syringe

    Sliding through a syringe

    250 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT researchers have developed a simple, low-cost technology to administer powerful drug formulations that are too viscous to be injected using conventional medical syringes. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2020/syringe-concentrated-biologic-drugs-0824)

  • 02:20 Lab on a LEGO

    Lab on a LEGO

    527 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT engineers turned to LEGO bricks as the basis of their new microfluidic design because of their precision and consistency. No matter where in the world they are found, LEGO bricks are guaranteed to line up, and snap seamlessly and securely in

  • 02:24 New system can sterilize medical tools using solar heat

    New system can sterilize medical tools using solar heat

    310 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and the Indian Institute of Technology has developed a device that could provide pressurized steam to run autoclaves without the need for electricity in off-grid areas such as the developing world. (Learn more: https://news.

  • 01:52 Plant-to-human communication

    Plant-to-human communication

    617 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have transformed spinach plants into sensors that can detect explosives and wirelessly relay that information to a handheld device similar to a smartphone. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2016/nanobionic-spinach-plants-detect-explosives-103

  • 01:04 Robot takes contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs

    Robot takes contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs

    321 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and Brigham and Women's Hospital have developed a system that allows a robot to take contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/spot-robot-vital-signs-0831)Watch more videos fro

  • 02:39 Make way for Little HERMES, the lightweight bipedal robot

    Make way for Little HERMES, the lightweight bipedal robot

    363 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineers at MIT have designed a new lightweight bipedal robot, that can lean from side to side, walk in place, and jump while keeping its balance. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2019/two-legged-robot-mimics-human-balance-while-running-jumping-1030)Watc

  • 02:21 Robo-picker grasps and packs

    Robo-picker grasps and packs

    416 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers from MIT and Princeton University has developed a robotic system that can successfully localize and pick up any item, amid clutter, and move it to another location. This technology earned them a first place spot at the 2017 Amazon Robo

  • 02:35 How to mass produce cell-sized robots

    How to mass produce cell-sized robots

    405 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers at MIT have developed a novel method to mass-produce tiny robots, no bigger than a cell, quickly, easily and accurately with little to no external stimulus. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/how-mass-produce-cell-sized-robots-1023)

  • 03:02 Particle robots

    Particle robots

    410 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers from MIT, Columbia University, and elsewhere have developed computationally simple robots that connect in large groups to move around, transport objects, and complete other tasks. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2019/particle-robot-cluster-s

  • 02:32 Jell-O-like, expanding pill

    Jell-O-like, expanding pill

    445 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have designed an ingestible, Jell-O-like pill that, upon reaching the stomach, quickly swells to the size of a soft, squishy ping-pong ball big enough to stay in the stomach for an extended period of time. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/20

  • 01:31 System can 3-D print an entire building

    System can 3-D print an entire building

    580 views / 0 likes - added

    The list of materials that can be produced by 3-D printing has grown to include not just plastics but also metal, glass, and even food. Now, MIT researchers are expanding the list further, with the design of a system that can 3-D print the basic structure

    Featured
  • 02:19 Plug-and-play diagnostics

    Plug-and-play diagnostics

    383 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT’s Little Devices Lab have developed a set of modular blocks that can be put together in different ways to produce diagnostic devices. These “plug-and-play” devices, which require little expertise to assemble, can test blood glucose leve

  • 02:20 One giant leap for the mini cheetah

    One giant leap for the mini cheetah

    150 views / 0 likes - added

    A new control system, designed by researchers in MIT's Improbable AI Lab and demonstrated using MITs robotic mini cheetah, enables four-legged robots to traverse across uneven terrain in real-time. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2021/one-giant-leap-mini

  • 00:41 A paper-thin loudspeaker plays "We Are the Champions" by Queen

    A paper-thin loudspeaker plays "We Are the Champions" by Queen

    122 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have developed a paper-thin loudspeaker that turn any surface into an audio source. This thin-film loudspeaker produces sound with minimal distortion while using a fraction of the energy required by a traditional loudspeaker. Watch more vide

  • 03:09 Forest search-and-rescue

    Forest search-and-rescue

    406 views / 0 likes - added

    A group of researchers from MIT and the NASA Langley Research Center has developed an autonomous system for a fleet of quadrotor drones that enables them to search collaboratively under dense forest canopies using only on-board computation and wireless co

  • 02:35 Lining the GI tract

    Lining the GI tract

    257 views / 0 likes - added

    By making use of enzymes found in the digestive tract, MIT engineers have devised a way to apply a temporary synthetic coating to the lining of the small intestine. This coating could be adapted to deliver drugs, aid in digestion, or prevent nutrients suc

  • 01:52 Origami-inspired medical patch for sealing internal injuries

    Origami-inspired medical patch for sealing internal injuries

    153 views / 0 likes - added

    Taking inspiration from origami, MIT engineers have designed a medical patch that can be folded around minimally invasive surgical tools and delivered through airways, intestines, and other narrow spaces, to patch up internal injuries. (Learn more: https:

  • 01:52 Blood testing via sound waves

    Blood testing via sound waves

    673 views / 0 likes - added

    A multi-disciplinary team of researchers from MIT, Duke University, Magee-Women's Research Institute, and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore has developed a novel way to analyze blood, for signatures of cancer and other diseases, using sound wa

  • 02:24 Magnetic shape-shifters

    Magnetic shape-shifters

    450 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have created soft, magnetic 3-D-printed structures that can transform their shape almost instantaneously by the wave of a magnet. The structures are flexible, yet strong and could be used to develop remotely controlled biomedical devices. (L

  • Insect-like robots

    Insect-like robots

    183 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers has developed a new generation of tiny, agile drones that look, act and maneuver like actual insects allowing them to operate in cramped spaces and withstand collisions. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2021/researchers-introduce-new

  • Robotic fibers can make breath-monitoring garments

    Robotic fibers can make breath-monitoring garments

    146 views / 0 likes - added

    A new kind of fiber developed by researchers at MIT and in Sweden can be made into cloth that senses how much it is being stretched or compressed, and then provides immediate tactile feedback in the form of pressure or vibration. Such fabrics, the team su

  • 02:00 Slime Oobleck - The science of cornstarch and water

    Slime Oobleck - The science of cornstarch and water

    459 views / 0 likes - added

    When you mix cornstarch and water, weird things happen. Sometimes it acts like a liquid and sometimes it acts like a solid. Now, a team of MIT engineers have developed a mathematical model that can accurately predict this material's behavior under various

  • 01:20 Fast and forceful gel robots

    Fast and forceful gel robots

    525 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineers at MIT have fabricated transparent gel robots that can perform a number of fast, forceful tasks, including kicking a ball underwater, and grabbing and releasing a live fish. (Learn more:https://news.mit.edu/2017/transparent-gel-robots-catch-rele

  • 02:10 Self-folding printable structures

    Self-folding printable structures

    466 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and Umass Amherst have designed 3-D printed structures that can fold themselves up without any outside stimulus, and the folding begins the instant it is peeled off the printing platform. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/201

    Featured
  • 02:30 Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost

    Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost

    154 views / 0 likes - added

    A new fabrication technique, developed by a team of electrical engineers and computer scientists, produces low-voltage, power-dense artificial muscles that improve the performance of flying microrobots. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2021/micro-robots-

  • 02:46 Revolutionizing Agriculture with Low Emissions, Resilient Crops

    Revolutionizing Agriculture with Low Emissions, Resilient Crops

    123 views / 0 likes - added

    This project is working to revolutionize the agricultural sector with climate-resilient crops and fertilizers that have the ability to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production. Learn more about this project: https://climategrandch

  • 01:24 Meet Boston Jedi

    Meet Boston Jedi

    671 views / 1 likes - added

    Meet Boston Jedi, a Boston-based lightsaber stage combat club that meets weekly to practice on MIT's campus. Members of the club, which include MIT students and alumni, use lightsaber props to create visually engaging battle sequences to perform for audie

    Featured
  • 01:39 Popular Robots learn to use their hands

    Robots learn to use their hands

    836 views / 0 likes - added

    Having robots learn dexterous tasks requiring real-time hand-eye coordination is hard. Many tasks that we would consider simple, like hanging up a baseball cap on a rack, would be very challenging for most robot software. What's more, for a robot to learn

  • 02:17 One of the strongest lightweight materials known

    One of the strongest lightweight materials known

    475 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT engineers has successfully designed a new 3-D material with five percent the density of steel and ten times the strength, making it one of the strongest lightweight materials known. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/3-d-graphene-stronges

  • 03:37 AUDIO: New AI model detects asymptomatic Covid-19 infections

    AUDIO: New AI model detects asymptomatic Covid-19 infections

    386 views / 1 likes - added

    A team of MIT researchers have developed an AI model that can distinguish asymptomatic people with Covid-19 from healthy individuals without the disease through forced-cough recordings. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/covid-19-cough-cellphone-detect

  • 03:49 Testing wastewater to help detect Covid-19

    Testing wastewater to help detect Covid-19

    326 views / 0 likes - added

    In a project that will run through the fall semester, wastewater from seven buildings on campus will be tested each day for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. The project is designed to determine if wastewater testing can be an effective early wa

  • 02:05 Secrets of the conch shell and its toughness

    Secrets of the conch shell and its toughness

    441 views / 0 likes - added

    The shells of marine organisms take a beating from impacts due to storms and tides, rocky shores, and sharp-toothed predators. But as recent research has demonstrated, one type of shell stands out above all the others in its toughness: the conch. Now, res

  • 02:39 Furry Wetsuits

    Furry Wetsuits

    419 views / 0 likes - added

    Inspired by hairy, semiaquatic mammals such as beavers and sea otters, a group of MIT engineers are fabricating fur-like rubbery pelts learn how these mammals stay warm and even dry while diving underwater. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2016/beaver-ins

  • 04:45 Light-based therapy for Alzheimer's disease

    Light-based therapy for Alzheimer's disease

    519 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers in Li-Huei Tsai's laboratory at the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory have shown that disrupted gamma waves in the brains of mice with Alzheimer’s disease can be corrected by a unique non-invasive technique using flickering light. (Lea

  • 03:25 3D printing with living organisms

    3D printing with living organisms

    449 views / 0 likes - added

    A method for printing 3D objects that can control living organisms in predicable ways has been developed by an interdisciplinary team of researchers at MIT and elsewhere. This technique may lead to 3D printing of biomedical tools that can be customized to

  • 02:48 New coating could prevent pipeline clogging

    New coating could prevent pipeline clogging

    460 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT have developed a coating that could stop the buildup of hydrate ices that slow or block oil and gas flow. These hydrates are potentially explosive and are largely responsible for the initial failure to contain the oil spill that rocked

  • 01:49 Lending a Hand

    Lending a Hand

    182 views / 0 likes - added

    An Inflatable robotic hand design gives amputees real-time tactile control and enables a wide range of daily activities, such as zipping a suitcase, shaking hands, and petting a cat. The smart hand is soft and elastic, weighs about half a pound, and costs

  • 01:55 Muscles made of nylon

    Muscles made of nylon

    643 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT researchers have come up with one of the simplest and lowest-cost systems yet for developing artificial muscles, in which a material reproduces some of the bending motions that natural muscle tissues perform. The key ingredient? Nylon fiber. (Learn mo

    Featured
  • 00:42 Popular Neutron stars collide

    Neutron stars collide

    939 views / 1 likes - added

    For the first time, scientists have directly detected gravitational waves – ripples in space-time – in addition to light from the spectacular collision of two neutron stars. This marks the first time that a cosmic event has been viewed in both gravitation

  • 02:08 Readings in Old and Middle English

    Readings in Old and Middle English

    593 views / 1 likes - added

    MIT 21L.705 Major Authors: Old English and Beowulf, Spring 2014 View the complete course: http://ocw.mit.edu/21L-705S14 Instructor: Arthur Bahr MIT associate professor Arthur Bahr reads a short excerpt of Beowulf in Old English and Sir Gawayne and the Gre

  • 01:01 Building a soft robotic cube

    Building a soft robotic cube

    648 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) have developed a soft robotic cube that uses a series of spring-loaded metal tongues to jump, bounce, and roll. In this video, we watch the process of building a

    Featured
  • 04:47 How to Warm Dinner Plates  Is the Microwave Safe?

    How to Warm Dinner Plates Is the Microwave Safe?

    448 views / 0 likes - added

    Warm plates keep food hot, and can even reheat food that needs it, like slices of well-rested meat. But what's the best way to heat an empty plate at home? The oven, hot running water and the microwave are all options — but MIT engineering and mater

  • 03:13 Wheel momentum Walter Lewin

    Wheel momentum Walter Lewin

    585 views / 0 likes - added

    This video is a part of a lecture from MIT open courseware. The teacher is Prof. Walter Lewin. He is Dutch origin astrophysicist. But at 1966 he went to MIT and stayed there.

  • 00:39 Flying through a fly's brain

    Flying through a fly's brain

    400 views / 0 likes - added

    Can flying through the fly brain bring us insight into how the fly flies? Learn more about this new approach to combining lattice-sheet microscopy with expansion microscopy, developed by researchers from the Media Lab's Synthetic Neurobiology group and co

  • 04:58 TuringBox: Democratizing the study of AI

    TuringBox: Democratizing the study of AI

    442 views / 0 likes - added

    The proliferation of AI has hindered our ability to understand its emerging behavior. TuringBox is a digital market that facilitates both the behavioural study of AI and the production of new, socially-aware AI. Visit us online at turingbox.mit.edu and ch

  • How Do Braces Work?

    How Do Braces Work?

    168 views / 0 likes - added

    Braces are a lot more barbaric - and awesome - than you might think. But they actually just copy the process that the rest of your bones naturally undergo! Andrea, an MIT Sloan Fellow, explains.Learn more about the related research that's happening at MIT

  • 02:01 Electronic Paint1977

    Electronic Paint1977

    382 views / 0 likes - added

    #TBT to 1977 and the Architecture Machine Group, as Paul Pangaro demonstrates one of the first paint programs, which was featured in the cover story of the October 1977 issue of Technology Review. https://www.technologyreview.com/magazine/1977/10/ More in

  • 04:07 Popular Solve Problems: Be An Engineer!

    Solve Problems: Be An Engineer!

    1,092 views / 6 likes - added

    Learn about engineers, who dream up a lot of the things you use every day, from toys to tools! ---------- Like SciShow? Want to help support us, and also get things to put on your walls, cover your torso and hold your liquids? Check out our awesome produc

    Featured
  • 01:05 Do You Know All Of These Facts About the International Space Station?

    Do You Know All Of These Facts About the International Space Station?

    473 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c Learn how the ISS can help us explore and colonize the solar system. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering/ More of the Impossible! http://www

  • 01:33 This Brilliant Experiment Shows How Fiber Optic Cables Bend Light

    This Brilliant Experiment Shows How Fiber Optic Cables Bend Light

    697 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c Special chemicals give even water what looks like magical properties. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering/ More of the Impossible! http://ww

  • 01:51 Here's How Massive Icebreaker Ships Plow Through Frozen Seas

    Here's How Massive Icebreaker Ships Plow Through Frozen Seas

    481 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c These specialized ships help create paths by pushing into ice pockets. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering/ More of the Impossible! http://w

  • 02:43 The Eden Project Houses Multiple Ecosystems In These Incredible Geodesic Domes

    The Eden Project Houses Multiple Ecosystems In These Incredible Geodesic Domes

    461 views / 1 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c Located in Cornwall, England, these biomes are home to many diverse climates and environments. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering/ More of

  • 03:01 Here's How Engineers Used Ancient Techniques To Protect Tokyo's Skytree From Earthquakes

    Here's How Engineers Used Ancient Techniques To Protect Tokyo's Skytree From Earthquakes

    667 views / 2 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c Oil dampers, modeled on the ones on NASA's launch towers, allow the Skytree to sway instead of collapse. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering

  • 01:34 Popular Why Don't Roller Coasters Fly Off the Tracks?

    Why Don't Roller Coasters Fly Off the Tracks?

    824 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c Upstop wheels apply friction under the tracks to prevent roller coasters from derailing during zero-G drops and turns. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossib

    Featured
  • 03:18 See How Innovative Sound Mirrors Helped Detect Enemy Aircraft

    See How Innovative Sound Mirrors Helped Detect Enemy Aircraft

    553 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | New Season TONIGHT at 9/8c Sound mirrors are enormous devices used to reflect and focus sound waves. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://www.sciencechannelgo.com/impossible-engineering/ More of the Impossib

  • 02:49 Here's The Chemical Compound You Can Thank For Billiard Balls And False Teeth

    Here's The Chemical Compound You Can Thank For Billiard Balls And False Teeth

    620 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c Billiard balls were originally made of ivory, but the endangerment of elephants led to the creation of a $10,000 prize to find an alternative material. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel GO: https://

  • 01:56 This Giant Telescope Receives Radio Waves From Billions Of Light Years Away

    This Giant Telescope Receives Radio Waves From Billions Of Light Years Away

    485 views / 0 likes - added

    Impossible Engineering | Thursdays at 9/8c The five-hundred-meter Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope, or FAST, is a radio telescope located in the Dawodang depression in China. It's the largest in the world. Full Episodes Streaming FREE on Science Channel

  • 06:42 The Physics of Falling Back in your Chair

    The Physics of Falling Back in your Chair

    434 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineering statics (or the study of objects at rest) is a fundamental part of most engineering curricula. It's broadly applicable not only to engineers, but anyone who has anything that needs to stay put. Thank you for watching, and let me know what you

  • 05:07 Popular Jessi Has a Problem!

    Jessi Has a Problem!

    1,155 views / 1 likes - added

    Do you like using your imagination to build things that solve problems? If you do, you're thinking like an engineer! Learn how engineers identify and solve problems, then help Jessi with a big problem of her own! ---------- Love SciShow Kids and want to h

  • 03:37 Are University Admissions Biased? | Simpson's Paradox Part 2

    Are University Admissions Biased? | Simpson's Paradox Part 2

    595 views / 0 likes - added

    Simpson's Paradox Part 2. Thanks to Skillshare for supporting this video! Head to http://skl.sh/minutephysics for your first two months free. Comments disabled because the discourse failed to remain civil. This video is about how to tell whether or not un

  • 19:13 Popular Backyard Squirrel Maze 2.0- The Walnut Heist

    Backyard Squirrel Maze 2.0- The Walnut Heist

    1,300 views / 5 likes - added

    I bit off more than I could chew. Join me this summer in my Creative Engineering class!! https://Monthly.com/MarkRoberNEW Phat Gus Merch here!! https://markrober.store/More info about my Creative Engineering Course- This class is a hands-on, 30-day learni

  • 06:16 Oxygen is magnetic?!

    Oxygen is magnetic?!

    593 views / 0 likes - added

    Try 23andMe at http://23andme.com/physicsgirl Liquid oxygen has unusual magnetic properties. This demonstration with the MIT Technical Services Group and a crazy blowtorch demonstration on the curie point of iron share a glimpse into how different kinds o

  • 08:10 How Close Are We to Living in the Ocean?

    How Close Are We to Living in the Ocean?

    448 views / 0 likes - added

    Sea level rise will threaten 90% of major cities in the coming decades. But what if we just dove in to meet it? How close are we to building a city in the ocean?How Close Are We? Season 3 - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ypm4QcOOqXQ&list=PL6uC-XGZC7X56r8

  • 03:15 He Jiankui and the World's First Gene-edited Babies

    He Jiankui and the World's First Gene-edited Babies

    348 views / 0 likes - added

    Tune in and join the conversation during the premiere of "CRISPR in Context: The New World of Human Genetic Engineering" on Friday, October 25th at 8pm EST.PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONIts happened. The first children genetically engineered with the powerful DNA-ed

  • 01:35 A Brief History of Gene Editing

    A Brief History of Gene Editing

    331 views / 0 likes - added

    Tune in and join the conversation during the premiere of "CRISPR in Context: The New World of Human Genetic Engineering" on Friday, October 25th at 8pm EST.PROGRAM DESCRIPTIONIts happened. The first children genetically engineered with the powerful DNA-ed

  • 02:36 Time-Folded Optics

    Time-Folded Optics

    442 views / 0 likes - added

    With the rapid development of faster frame rates and more light-sensitive camera sensors, why aren't camera lenses quickly evolving as well? Researchers at the MIT Media Lab's Camera Culture group are addressing that question with a new way to utilize tim

  • 02:13 Getting submarines talking to airplanes, finally

    Getting submarines talking to airplanes, finally

    451 views / 0 likes - added

    Until recently, there has never been a way to send communication signals between air and water. If an underwater submarine passes beneath a plane in the sky, there's been no way for them to communicate with each other without having the submarine surface,

  • 10:01 Popular Why You Should Embrace Your Stutter | Juan V. Lopez | TEDxUniversityofNevada

    Why You Should Embrace Your Stutter | Juan V. Lopez | TEDxUniversityofNevada

    787 views / 1 likes - added

    Juan V. Lopez is an MBA student at The University of Nevada. In this inspiring talk, Juan explains why he now embraces his stutter as an integral part of his unique self. Juan V López is a MBA Candidate at the University of Nevada, first-generation

  • 01:33 Popular These YouTube Engineers Built An 'Underwater Iron Man Jetpack'

    These YouTube Engineers Built An 'Underwater Iron Man Jetpack'

    906 views / 0 likes - added

    This is the "Underwater Iron Man Jetpack" and it was built by Eclectical Engineering. They say that strapping electric motors to yourself can make you swim faster than Michael Phelps. Here's how they did it. They created a watertight seal for the jetpack'

  • 01:11 Scientists Build Artificial Cell That Can Grow and Divide Like a Real One

    Scientists Build Artificial Cell That Can Grow and Divide Like a Real One

    200 views / 0 likes - added

    Its a new first for genetic engineering.

  • 03:21 HERMES System - 2016 UAE Robots for Good Competition

    HERMES System - 2016 UAE Robots for Good Competition

    509 views / 0 likes - added

    HERMES System from MIT entry for the 2016 UAE Robots for Good Competition.

  • 26:14 Technology Inspired by Nature – AMNH SciCafe

    Technology Inspired by Nature – AMNH SciCafe

    418 views / 0 likes - added

    What does a carnivorous plant have in common with the design for a water-saving toilet? What about a hungry cell with surgical equipment? It may be surprising to learn that engineers still turn to the natural world for inspiration. For Tak-Sing Wong, a pr

  • 08:24 Citicorp Center | NYC skyscraper saved by a students question

    Citicorp Center | NYC skyscraper saved by a students question

    543 views / 0 likes - added

    The Citicorp Center repair is a classic engineering case study of how mistakes must be avoided in engineering and construction of public works. A skyscraper in New York City needed a unique structural system. While reviewing the design a student asked a q

  • 09:37 Ideal Circuit Elements And Sources

    Ideal Circuit Elements And Sources

    500 views / 0 likes - added

    Circuit Analysis | Electrical engineering | Khan Academy

  • 04:11 Why Don't We Have Water Powered Cars Yet?

    Why Don't We Have Water Powered Cars Yet?

    605 views / 2 likes - added

    Today we're dipping our toes into the engineering and physics behind water-powered cars! Why Don't We Launch Our Trash Into The Sun? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWh7goEjkcI&list=PL8L0MzSk_V6JtEDRfRMyb6rFd1acqYSlO&index=61 Latest Uploads: https://youtu

  • 03:27 "Never been a better time" - Ben Ryan is Born to Engineer

    "Never been a better time" - Ben Ryan is Born to Engineer

    340 views / 0 likes - added

    For more engineering stories, news and resources visit us at www.borntoengineer.com Sol Ryan had to have his arm amputated 10 days after he was born. When his father Ben saw the prosthetics that were available for small children, he knew that it wasn't go

  • 03:14 We Can Now 3D Print in Suspended Gravity (And It’s Mesmerizing!)

    We Can Now 3D Print in Suspended Gravity (And It’s Mesmerizing!)

    470 views / 1 likes - added

    Rapid liquid printing is faster and better than 3D printing, how does this sci-fi-like method work? Scientists Put the Brain of a Worm Into a Robot… and It MOVED - https://youtu.be/eYS7UIUM_SQ Read More: 3d Printing is Yesterday's News. Westworld-style Li

  • 03:47 Why Scientists Used Graphene Nanoribbons to Engineer Bionic Mushrooms

    Why Scientists Used Graphene Nanoribbons to Engineer Bionic Mushrooms

    475 views / 0 likes - added

    This is the first time researchers have created an "engineered symbiosis" by combining bacteria with nanomaterials to produce the next generation of bionic architectures. Why Twisted Light Holds the Key to Radically Faster Internet - https://youtu.be/Cvts

  • 17:48 How Railroad Crossings Work

    How Railroad Crossings Work

    29 views / 0 likes - added

    How do they know when a train is on the way?Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: https://go.nebula.tv/Practical-EngineeringWatch Jet Lag: https://nebula.tv/jetlag?ref=practical-engineeringDespite the hazard they pose, trains have t

  • 05:20 Popular Overview Of Pixar In A Box

    Overview Of Pixar In A Box

    866 views / 0 likes - added

    To see the full curriculum, go to www.pixarinabox.org. Learn how Pixar filmmakers use science, technology, engineering, art, and math to create movie magic. Pixar in a Box is a collaboration between Khan Academy and Pixar Animation Studios, sponsored by D

  • 11:50 Carbon Fiber - The Material Of The Future?

    Carbon Fiber - The Material Of The Future?

    520 views / 0 likes - added

    Get 10% off Squarespace by following this link: http://squarespace.com/realengineering Get your Real Engineering shirts at: https://store.dftba.com/collections/real-engineering A huge thank you to Éire Composites for giving me some sample materials to sho

  • 02:39 Popular Constructing The Shard Mega Tower

    Constructing The Shard Mega Tower

    706 views / 2 likes - added

    The Shard skyscraper in London is taller than the Eiffel Tower. The Shard imposes itself on the London skyline as a marvel of structural engineering. In order to construct this beastly building, engineers used a giant slipform rig. #ImpossibleEngineering

  • 01:09 RFind: Extreme Localization for Billions of Items

    RFind: Extreme Localization for Billions of Items

    564 views / 0 likes - added

    From the Signal Kinetics group at the MIT Media Lab: RFind, a new technology that allows us to transform low-cost, battery-free wireless stickers into powerful radars. By placing one of these stickers on any object, we can locate it with extreme accuracy.

  • 01:56 Flying Robots Can Conserve Energy By Perching

    Flying Robots Can Conserve Energy By Perching

    568 views / 0 likes - added

    Perching saves energy but sticking the landing has been a tough engineering problem.

  • 00:57 Worlds Largest Frisbee Launcher

    Worlds Largest Frisbee Launcher

    69 views / 0 likes - added

    I wagered 23,893,225 subs on my engineering skills. @CrunchLabs


>> View mit engineering programs bachelors web videos


RSS