The Scientific Americans – Load And Go! (FULL ALBUM)
Formados a fines de los 70 y separandose en el 83 The Scientific Americans contaron con 3 lanzamientos, este es su 3ero. El tema que recomiendo es Fascist.
juaniandino
Geek Out Session: Coronavirus--how It infects us and how we might stop it
How does SARS-CoV-2 sneak into our body? What can our immune system do and how can the virus sometimes defeat it? How do the leading drug and ...
Scientific American
The Mind-Blowing Mathematics of Sunflowers - Instant Egghead #59
Why do the number of spirals in a sunflower match up with the integers 34, 55, 89 and 144 -- numbers found in the famous Fibonacci Sequence? Scientific ...
Scientific American
Why Are Chimps Stronger Than Humans? - Instant Egghead #30
The last several years have seen a number of horrific maulings at the hands of chimpanzees. How can animals that share 99 percent of their genes with us, yet ...
Scientific American
Geek Out Session: Will we ever get to Mars?
Join Scientific American for a conversation about the next steps in humanity's reconnaissance of Mars. Featuring Casey Dreier, senior space policy adviser at ...
Scientific American
Why Do Paper Cuts Hurt So Much? - Instant Egghead #25
Some of the most infuriating and stabbing pain is caused by nothing but a thin sheet of paper. Scientific American editor Ferris Jabr explains why the page of a ...
Scientific American
Summer of Love at Scientific American! - Best of the Blogs #8
Check out the hottest science posts for August 2013, fresh from the Scientific American blog network. Carin Bondar, the biologist with a twist, is your host.
Scientific American
Scientific American Backs Biden With Its First Presidential Endorsement In History | MSNBC
About The Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell: Drawing upon his experience as a former chief of staff on the Senate Finance Committee and as an ...
MSNBC
Genes vs. DNA vs. Chromosomes - Instant Egghead #19
Scientific American editor Eric R. Olson untangles the relationship between the most fundamental components of our biology. -- Please visit our website to ...
Scientific American
Neuroscience Meets Magic - by Scientific American
Brain scientists Stephen Macknik and Susana Martinez-Conde explain the science behind the mental manipulations of gentleman thief Apollo Robbins.
Scientific American
What Happens to Your Body after You Die? - Instant Egghead #65
Whatever your beliefs, most people seem to agree that the body left behind when we depart this mortal coil is just a heap of bones and flesh. But what happens ...
Scientific American
Will America’s disregard for science be the end of its reign? | Big Think
As the great minds in this video can attest, there are systems and mechanisms in place to discern between opinion and truth. By making conscious efforts to ...
Big Think
Virtual Archaeology - by Scientific American
Using quad bikes and computer gaming software, archaeologists are reconstructing the landscape around Stonehenge to learn more about this ancient ...
Scientific American
Why Do We Sleep? - Instant Egghead #55
We spend nearly a third of our lives asleep, but scientists don't agree on sleep's purpose. Scientific American contributor Joss Fong explains what we know, and ...
Scientific American
Scientific American Frontiers S07E03 Pieces of Mind
The Man with Two Brains; Remembering What Matters; True of False?; What's in a Dream?; New Brain - Old Tricks.
Devin Watson
Why Scientific American is giving its first ever presidential endorsement | Laura Helmuth Interview
Whether its climate change or the coronavirus pandemic, President Trump repeatedly rejects advice from specialists. He refuses to follow the science. Earlier ...
DW News
What Is Vertigo? - Instant Egghead #67
Is the world spinning, and you don't know why? Scientific American MIND editor Ingrid Wickelgren explains how your inner ear can throw you off balance.
Scientific American
Why Do Autumn Leaves Change Color? - Instant Egghead #51
Scientific American editor Mark Fischetti explains how the leaves of deciduous trees perform their annual chameleon act, changing from various shades of green ...
Scientific American
Social Cues in the Brain - by Scientific American
-- For our latest videos visit the Scientific American video page http://scientificamerican.com/video.cfm or subscribe via RSS ...
Scientific American
Werner Herzog on the 'Cave of Forgotten Dreams' - by Scientific American
Legendary director Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man, Rescue Dawn) talks about his latest film 'Cave of Forgotten Dreams'. Herzog's first foray into 3-D, the movie ...
Scientific American
How do deepfakes actually work?
What can former U.S. president Richard Nixon possibly teach us about artificial intelligence today and the future of misinformation online? Nothing. The real ...
Scientific American
Working Gears Evolved in Plant-Hopping Insect - by Scientific American
A study in the journal Science reveals that a juvenile form of the insect Issus Coleoptratus evolved gears to help with jumping. This is the first time working gears ...
Scientific American
Scientific American Innovator Award Krtin Nithiyanandam Google Science Fair 2015
Inspire Future
What Is a Genetically Modified Food? - Instant Egghead #45
Genetically modified foods have been demonized in recent years by health advocates and environmentalists alike. If we look at the history of food cultivation, ...
Scientific American
Motherhood: Your brain on kids - by Scientific American
-- This video was originally published to ScientificAmerican.com on June 30th, 2011. For our most up-to-date videos visit the Scientific American video page at ...
Scientific American
Scientific American Arachnophobia
SlimaksClass
The science community has long been compromised | Scientific American Endorses Joe Biden
Let's discuss Join our DISCORD: https://discord.gg/6EatsQ2 Be sure to visit https:www.EricDJuly.com for updates, news and much more. You can also visit www.
YoungRippa59
Brain Parasite Makes Mice Fearless - by Scientific American
Protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii rendered mice unafraid of cat odor, even after the infection cleared, according to a study published in PLoS ONE.
Scientific American
Yeast Alive! - by Scientific American
Editor-in-Chief Mariette DiChristina and her daughters inflate a balloon with yeast, the tiny organisms that make bread rise in the oven. Activity instructions ...
Scientific American
What is the smart grid? - by Scientific American
Whether we want it or not, the "smart grid" is on its way. In this animated guide we show you the essential features. -- SUBSCRIBE to our channel: ...
Scientific American
On its 30th Birthday, the Hubble Telescope has a simple wish for the world
I have seen 160000 sunrises and sunsets, more than anyone could hope for. Circling hundreds of miles above the surface of our big blue marble for 30 years, ...
Scientific American
How to Make Oobleck - by Scientific American
Editor-in-Chief Mariette DiChristina and her daughters show us how to make Oobleck, a substance that's not quite liquid and not quite solid. Activity instructions ...
Scientific American
Dark side (dark matter and dark energy) of the Universe w/ Alan Alda Scientific American Frontiers
Dark side of the Universe with Alan Alda HD Once we thought our world was the center of the Universe. Today we know we're on a minor if privileged planet ...
Star Stuff
Science Captures Close Encounters Between Great White Sharks and Beachgoers With Drones
Over the past decade, the number of encounters between humans and sharks swimming off the coast of California has risen dramatically. Chris Lowe, director of ...
Scientific American
I am a Scientific American
SimpleBox joined forces with Nature Publishing Group to provide graphics and finishing edits for the magazine Scientific American. The in-house team at SA ...
SIMPLEBOX
The Hidden Prejudice - Scientific American Frontiers
Scientific American Frontiers Host, Alan Alda, speaks with Dr. Mahzarin R. Banaji (Harvard University) and Dr. Brian Nosek (University of Virginia) on how the ...
RLRich22
Gravitational Waves, Theoretical Alien Antenna, Europa and More: 60-Second Science Podcasts
Listen to the experts discuss the use and misuse of science in the courtroom to interpret forensic science, how ancient dental plaque can be used to understand ...
Scientific American
Scientific American at the 2015 Google Science Fair
Check out how Ben Franklin could tell an electrical storm was brewing.
Scientific American
Science in America - Neil deGrasse Tyson
We offer this 4min video on “Science in America”, containing what may be the most important words Neil deGrasse Tyson has ever spoken. ------------- Redglass ...
StarTalk
Here's how the tests for COVID-19 actually work
Technologies such as PCR, serologic assays and rapid diagnostics help us understand the spread of COVID-19. But how do they do that? Please visit our ...
Scientific American
Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is spreading. Science uses this one number to figure out just how fast.
COVID-19. SARS. MERS. Ebola... whenever there's a new outbreak, scientists rush to calculate a number called the R0, or R-naught. Why? It's been a critical ...
Scientific American
Scientists reconstruct giant sauropod dinosaur - by Scientific American
A new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History features a 60-foot model of the dinosaur named Mamenchisaurus. The model reveals what we know ...
Scientific American