Algebra
How simple algebra can be used to investigate cubes and other polyhedra up to icosahedra.
More details | Watch nowAlgebra with Chinese subtitles
How simple algebra can be used to investigate cubes and other polyhedra up to icosahedra.
More details | Watch nowAluminium drinks can tab
Bill uses slow motion video to show the ingenious engineering design of the apparently simple tab of a pop can.
More details | Watch nowaskFSU 2- Rob Mueller at NASA Swampworks
Rob Mueller, Lead Senior Technologist at NASA Swampworks answers some questions about his project to 3D print on Mars and other space objects! Interview by Philip Schlenoff at GEOSET Studios before the Stacking Layers II conference http:/stackinglaye....
More details | Watch nowAsthma on the Run
A look into the research of biochemist Ceri Harrop, who specialises in respiratory medicine and developing new treatments for people with breathing difficulties.nAs part of her research at the University of Manchester, Ceri meets with athlete Wayne A....
More details | Watch nowBlack Box – A flight data recorder
In designing an object an engineer must choose the proper material. Never is this more important than in the 'black box' flight data recorder.
More details | Watch nowBuckyball workshop
Professor Sir Harry Kroto shows local schoolchildren in Sheffield how to build a buckyball
More details | Watch nowBuckyBall Workshop to Iceland
An Internet Buckyball workshop to 80 young children in Iceland which worked extremely well. It was the first test of the FSU Internet GEO project.
More details | Watch nowCan we see atoms?
We see smaller and smaller objects through naked eye and microscopes, from hair to atoms.
More details | Watch nowClimate Change: Madagascar
Anjali Nayar visited a pioneering project in Madagascar that's aiming to protect one of the country's few remaining forests. It's hoped that projects like this will help curb global warming. But first, these projects must overcome the poverty and pol....
More details | Watch nowCoffee Maker: Pumping water with no moving parts
To engineer an object means to make choices. Bill illustrates how the choice of having a single heating element made an engineer find a creative way to pump water with no moving parts.
More details | Watch nowCommunication on Earth, using Cables and Satellites
A brief look at the Physics behind sending signals along cables and via geostationary satellites. An experiment to measure the speed of an electrical pulse in a cable is described and the Physics of the orbits of communcations satellites is develope....
More details | Watch nowConcrete
Bill moves a piece of sewer pipe into his office to show how important the ancient material concrete is to our modern world. It, of course, wreaks havoc on his office.
More details | Watch nowCopper – The Miracle Metal
Bill cuts a copper pipe from his ceilng to show the five properties of copper that make it the most important metal for our world: From clean water to electronics.
More details | Watch nowCrater Formation in Sand
A description and demonstration of the way in which craters formed by dropping objects into sand can be linked to some elementary physics
More details | Watch nowCreativity in Science Art and Design
Dark Matter
A really good overview of Dark Matter - from an 11-year old! https://www.geoset.info/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/Dark-Matter.pdf
More details | Watch nowElectrical Generator
This short video shows one of the demonstrations for the Physics SEPNet exhibition - "Who will keep the lights on?" which travelled around the southern UK from February 2009. We describe and explain the electrical generator demonstration which Jona....
More details | Watch nowEmotion Recognition from Physiological Signals for Human Computer Interaction
Use of physiological signals for emotion recognition and human-computer interaction.
More details | Watch nowEnvironmental Scientist & Space Forester
Yadvinder works in the Geography department at Oxford University. He looks at how human activity and especially carbon dioxide emissions have changed the ecosystems of tropical rainforests. This work takes him on regular trips to his two research sit....
More details | Watch nowForms of Carbon Burning Diamond and Graphite; and the Discovery of Fullerenes
With the aid of Prof. Sir Harry Kroto, Dr Peter Wothers demonstrates that both Diamond and Graphite are indeed made of Carbon.
More details | Watch nowFractions 3
Mutiplying and dividing fractions: a systematic approach to this perennial problem.
More details | Watch nowGarbage – Rubbish?
Bill covers his office floor with trash to see what takes up space in a landfill. He digs through fast food containers and diapers to learn that what we really need is green design of our manufactured objects.
More details | Watch nowGenetic Engineering
Golf Balls
To learn what's inside a golf ball - and to show how clever engineers are - Bill uses a special cutter to chop one open - well more than one.
More details | Watch nowGraphene and the Carbon Revolution
Jonathan explains what graphene is and how it fits into the revolution in carbon science.
More details | Watch nowHandedness
Helix – Episode 1 – Genetics
Helix is an educational series covering genetic disorders, brought to you by Patricia Martin and powered by GEOSET Studios. In this first episode, Patricia primes young learners on modern genetic theory before diving into the exciting field of geneti....
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 2 – Tay-Sachs Disease
In this episode of Helix, Patricia Martin outlines the symptoms and complications associated with the terminal illness Tay-Sachs disease.
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 3 – Turner Syndrome
In this episode of Helix, Patricia Martin covers the chromosomal condition Turner syndrome. Patricia gives a quick lesson on the symptoms and treatments associated with this congenital disorder.
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 4 – Klinefelter Syndrome
In this episode of Helix, Patricia Martin outlines the symptoms and complications associated with Klinefelter syndrome, which is related to Turner syndrome.
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 5 – Down Syndrome
In this episode of Helix, Patricia Martin covers the very common and well-known chromosomal condition, Down syndrome.
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 6 – Sickle Cell Disease
In this episode of Helix, Patricia Martin outlines the symptoms and causes of sickle cell disease (also referred to as sickle cell anemia), a hemoglobin-affecting disorder.
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 7 – Hemophilia
Helix – Episode 8 – Wilson Disease
This episode outlines details about Wilson disease, a rare disorder involving the amounts of copper in the body, and the negative effects on vision and different organs.
More details | Watch nowHelix – Episode 9 – Autism
This episode covers the symptoms and theorized causes of the Autism Spectrum Disorders.
More details | Watch nowHow does a transistor work?
A short video explaining how transistors work. At the heart of our high-tech society with radios, mobile phones, computers and space exploration are tiny electronic components called transistors. They have revolutionised electronics and in the pr....
More details | Watch nowIBM Selectric Typewriter
Using slow motion video Bill Hammack shows how the mechanical digital-to-analogue converter of IBM's revolutionary 'golf ball' typewriter works.
More details | Watch nowInbreeding in an isolated population of animals
Jennifer talks about recent research detailing the effects of inbreeding on an isolated animal population and shows how this affects our ideas about breeding domestic animals.
More details | Watch nowJourney to Etna
Clive Oppenheimer, a vulcanologist working on the latest techniques to monitor and predict volcanic eruptions, demonstrates his work at Mount Etna, an active volcano in Sicily.nVolcanic eruptions pose a real threat to communities living nearby, and a....
More details | Watch nowMaps
A brief introduction to getting over the problems of representing a sphere on a flat sheet.
More details | Watch nowMatches
Bill reveals the importance of matches in the 19th century; he shares how adding phosphorous to them revolutionized life - in both good and bad ways
More details | Watch nowMeasuring the speed of sound – experimental details
A short clip showing the measurement of the speed of sound over short distances.
More details | Watch now