i want a second opinion about this rock i have it looks close to th...at iron kind of meteorite that i saw on crashcourse episode that talked about meteorite and id like to send a pic and get your thoughts. See More- Hello, I have one question about the last episode of Light! If micr...owave light has LESS energy than visible, how come it can cook food where visible light can't? Maybe this is a stupid question, but can you please answer? See More
- Have you considered doing a series on computer science?
CrashCourse shared Thought Café's video.

Are you as excited for CrashCourse Economics as we are? Here's a behind-the-scenes look at an animation from an upcoming episode!
In order to understand how we study the universe, we need to talk a little bit about light. Light is a form of energy. Its wavelength tells us its energy and color. Spectroscopy allows us to analyze those colors and determine an object’s temperature, density, spin, motion, and chemical composition.
Crash Course Econ is here! And episode 1 has @TheMuppets! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ez10ADR_gM
Today is day one of Crash Course Economics! Jacob Clifford and Adriene Hill introduce you to the subject and why you should learn about it. With help from the Muppets! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ez10ADR_gM
Your heart gets a lot of attention from poets, songwriters, and storytellers, but today Hank's gonna tell you how it really works. The heart’s ventricles, atria, and valves create a pump that maintains both high and low pressure to circulate blood from the heart to the body through your arteries, and bring it back to the heart through your veins. You'll also learn what your blood pressure measurements mean when we talk about systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
Today Phil helps keep you from ticking off an astronomer in your life by making sure you know the difference between a meteor, meteorite, and meteoroid. When the Earth plows through the stream emitted by a comet we get a meteor shower. Meteors burn up about 100 km above the Earth, but some survive to hit the ground. Most of these meteorites are rocky, some are metallic, and a few are a mix of the two. Very big meteorites can be a very big problem, but there are plans in the works to prevent us from going the way of the dinosaurs.
Next week, we start Economics with Jacob Clifford and Adriene Hill, and it's going to be a hoot. For now, watch this preview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9I_-ADGrKQo
In the second half of our look at the endocrine system, Hank discusses chemical homeostasis and hormone cascades. Specifically, he looks at the hypothalamus-pituitary-thyroid axis, or HPT axis, and all the ways your body can suffer when that system, or your hormones in general, get out of whack.
Hank begins teaching you about your endocrine system by explaining how it uses glands to produce hormones. These hormones are either amino-acid based and water soluble, or steroidal and lipid-soluble, and may target many types of cells or just turn on specific ones. He will also touch on hormone cascades, and how the HPA axis effects your stress response.
Today on Crash Course Astronomy, Phil explains comets. Comets are chunks of ice and rock that orbit the Sun. When they get near the Sun the ice turns into gas, forming the long tail, and also releases dust that forms a different tail. We’ve visited comets up close and found them to be lumpy, with vents in the surface that release the gas as ice sublimates. Eons ago, comets (and asteroids) may have brought a lot of water to Earth -- as well as the ingredients for life.
Hank calls in a friend to do his push ups for him today to explain how skeletal muscles work together to create and reverse movements. Hank and Claire also demonstrate the role size plays in motor units, the three phase cycle of muscle twitches, and how the strength and frequency of an impulse affects the strength and duration of a contraction. This episode also explains twitch summation, tetanus, and isotonic vs. isometric movements.
Time for another Bad Astronomy break.
Intellectual Property Outtakes! Sometimes they're funny; sometimes they're sad. Mostly funny, though. https://youtu.be/bk6PDXGStjI
We're kicking off our exploration of muscles with a look at the complex and important relationship between actin and myosin. Your smooth, cardiac, and skeletal muscles create movement by contracting and releasing in a process called the sliding filament model. Your skeletal muscles are constructed like a rope made of bundles of protein fibers, and that the smallest strands are your actin and myosin myofilaments. Its their use of calcium and ATP that causes the binding and unbinding that makes sarcomeres contract and relax.
Now that we’ve finished our tour of the planets, we’re headed back to the asteroid belt. Asteroids are chunks of rock, metal, or both that were once part of smallish planets but were destroyed after collisions. Most orbit the Sun between Mars and Jupiter, but some get near the Earth. The biggest, Ceres is far smaller than the Moon but still big enough to be round and have undergone differentiation.
Stan teaches you about international intellectual property law. It's all treaties and bad feelings. Yet no one ever fights it out in the international court. https://youtu.be/0pgEPKAKrtQ
Take another breather from all the anatomy & physiology terminology to watch Hank Green struggle to words.
Today we’re rounding out our planetary tour with ice giants Uranus and Neptune. Both have small rocky cores, thick mantles of ammonia, water, and methane, and atmospheres that make them look greenish and blue. Uranus has a truly weird rotation and relatively dull weather, while Neptune has clouds and storms whipped by tremendous winds. Both have rings and moons, with Neptune’s Triton probably being a captured iceball that has active geology.
It turns out, Crash Course is probably too general a name to trademark. Why are TMs important? Well, lot's of reasons. Primarily, they keep you from getting duped by unscrupulous sellers. If everyone could call their candy Good & Plenty, how would I know which one to buy? I gots to have the correct licorice gummy capsules. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gWaAJR5L18
We continue our look at your bones and skeletal system, skipping over the silly kid's song in favor of a more detailed look at your your axial and appendicular skeleton. This episode also talks about the structural and functional classifications of your joints and the major types of body movement that they facilitate.



!['Check it out! Brand new, super snazzy Crash Course logo mugs are now for sale on @[53179270621:274:DFTBA Records].
http://store.dftba.com/products/crashcourse-logo-mug'](https://scontent-lax1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xfp1/v/t1.0-9/p110x80/10375114_974033985947562_6070192079770793766_n.jpg?oh=0e1d6fa2b5551652b227c7ce1364b120&oe=56582CCD)
!['Frankenstein's Lab.
From Crash Course Literature #206, Frankenstein Part II.
http://youtu.be/hRDjmyEvmBI
By: @[193687950666016:274:Thought Café]'](https://scontent-lax1-1.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xap1/v/t1.0-9/q86/p296x100/10931726_962401133777514_8549925255709990105_n.jpg?oh=01f418d257f47b2e16d5fcaccf813a6a&oe=56272C2A)


























