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Who doesn't love ice creams? Just like us, Baby Om Nom is also crazyyyy for yummy ice creams! So come along and watch this lovely video where in Om Nom teaches colors using yummy SOCCER BALL ICE CREAM SCOOPS bought to you exclusively by Learn English with Om Nom!
Om Nom along with his best friend Om Nelle are now entering the magical world of learning where every day they learn something new about shapes, colors, numbers and more! Come along kids and join your ever favorite #OmNom in this new and exclusive #cartoon collection of #LearningWithOmNom!
Don’t forget to subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvMF...
To watch more of our videos click on the following links:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt7...
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EA...
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-sz...
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3...
Om Nom Stories: COLORFUL JELLY SLIME | Learn Colors with Jelly #Slime Fun Toys for Kids by Om Nom
Om Nom along with his best friend Om Nelle are now entering the magical world of learning where every day they learn something new about shapes, colors, numbers and more! Come along kids and join your ever favorite #OmNom in this new and exclusive #cartoon collection of #LearningWithOmNom!
Don’t forget to subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channe....l/UCvMF0dbLxjQVg9xCx
To watch more of our videos click on the following links:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt76T9rho
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EAAxk2hw
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-szJ0unTg
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3g9E1hg
Baby Om Nom Loves Yummy Soccer Ice Creams | Learn Colors with Finger Family Songs for Kids by Om Nom
Don’t forget to subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvMF...
Om Nom along with his best friend Om Nelle are now entering the magical world of learning where every day they learn something new about shapes, colors, numbers and more! Come along kids and join your ever favorite #OmNom in this new and exclusive #cartoon collection of #LearningWithOmNom!
To watch more of our videos click on the following links:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt7...
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EA...
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-sz...
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3...
Thanks for watching!
Much Love,
Om Nom
Om Nom along with his best friend Om Nelle are now entering the magical world of learning where every day they learn something new about shapes, colors, numbers and more! Come along kids and join your ever favorite #OmNom in this new and exclusive #cartoon collection of #LearningWithOmNom!
Don’t forget to subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvMF...
To watch more of our videos click on the following links:
Learn Colors with Om Nom Face Painting:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qjTt7...
The Om Nom Finger Family:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8wec3...
Learn Colors with Soccer Balls Xylophone:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ax-EA...
Learn Numbers and Colors with Underwater Sea Animals:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pe-sz...
Om Nom Arts and Crafts:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x4Lb3...
Thanks for watching!
Much Love,
Om Nom
#SoccerBalls
http://www.sciencefriday.com
With its heavy outer shell, weak vision, and primitive brain, the nautilus lacks much of the excitement of the more flashy and cunning cephalopods. Yet a series of experiments by evolutionary biologists Dr. Jennifer Basil and Robyn Crook involving fish juice, blue lights, and mazes dispels the notion that this ancient species is incapable of basic learning and throws into question the origins of cephalopods' intellectual prowess.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Additional Stills and Video Courtesy
Monterey Bay Aquarium, Robyn Crook, Peter Godfrey Smith, Henrik Steenfeldt Neils Ulmer Gary Friesen The Aquarium of the Pacific, Prelinger Archives, Shutterstock
*** http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions ***
With their ornately-colored bodies, rhythmic pulsations, and booty-shaking dance moves, male peacock spiders attract the attention of spectating females as well as researchers. One such animal behavior specialist, Madeline Girard, collected more than 30 different peacock spider species from the wilds of Australia and brought them back to her lab at UC Berkeley. Under controlled conditions, she recorded their unique dances in the hopes of deciphering what these displays actual say to a female spider and how standards differ between species.
All lab spider footage ©Madeline Girard
http://www.patreon.com/scifri . Please Help Support our Video Productions!
From bricks to furniture to leather, mushrooms can be made into a wide variety of materials. Philip Ross, of the San Fransisco based start-up, MycoWorks, explains how his company aims to fashion fungus into environmentally friendly clothing or structures in a fraction of the time and energy it takes when using traditional materials.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Filmed by Christian Baker
Music by Audio Network and Podington Bear (C.C. BY 3.0)
Additional Photos and Videos by Shutterstock.com , Pond5, Philip Ross, Michael Pisano (C.C. BY 3.0), Phillip Klawitter (C.C. BY 3.0), Paloma Ricon (C.C. BY 3.0)
Help support our video productions: http//www.patreon.com/scifri
*Correction May 1, 2017: At 2:06, a graphic in the video incorrectly wrote the formula for the golden ratio. It should be B/A = A/(A+B). We regret the error.
John Edmark's sculptures are both mesmerizing and mathematical. Using meticulously crafted platforms, patterns, and layers, Edmark's art explores the seemingly magical properties that are present in spiral geometries. In his most recent body of work, Edmark creates a series of animating “blooms” that endlessly unfold and animate as they spin beneath a strobe light.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Filmed by Christian Baker
Music by Audio Network
Additional Stills and Video by
John Edmark
Charlie Nordstrom
Shutterstock
*** We're now on Patreon! http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions! ***
In 1957 at The Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago, Dr. Karl P. Schmidt, famed snake expert and herpetologist, made a detailed scientific account of the effect of venom from a snake bite in the human body—his body. Schmidt made the record while he was dying. The newspapers called his notes a “death diary.”
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Biomechanists use many high-tech tools such as MRI or CT scanning to visualize the connective tissues of specimens. But for Dr. Adam Summers of the University of Washington's Friday Harbor Labs - none of these methods provide the inspiration of clearing and staining. Using a cocktail of chemicals, clearing and staining turns soft tissues transparent while tinting bones and cartilage bright red and blue. Preparing gobies, stingrays, and sharks in this manner has revealed to Dr. Adam Summers critical data while allowing him, and us, to appreciate the beauty of each fish's form.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Filmed by Ryan Hawk
Music by Audio Network
Additional Photos by Adam Summers and Shutterstock
http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions!
Paleoartist and scientific illustrator Gabriel Ugueto has a golden rule for his work: Accuracy. In order to resurrect the dinosaurs, Ugueto begins with a single bone and works his way from inside out. He researches whether there are any related animals alive today, or existing fossils that may shed light on how the bone fragment fits into a larger piece, and reconstructs the entire skeletal system. He then sketches in muscle groups, and adds skin and color considering where the animal lived and during what period of time.
But his resulting illustrations often don’t match the Jurassic Park-inspired dinosaurs that we’re used to.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Illustrations by Gabriel Ugueto
Additional Images by Shutterstock and E. Frey
Jesus Dapena studies how humans reach great heights, biomechanically. The world record for the high jump -- the event in which a person propels him- or herself over a horizontal bar -- is just over eight feet. To understand how this is possible, Dapena, a professor in the department of kinesiology at Indiana University, has filmed athletes and analyzed their movements to better understand the biomechanics of the leap. Dapena explains the basic ingredients of the high jump.
Many of us spend more time at our desks than anywhere else. Theoretical physicist and futurist Michio Kaku takes us on a tour of his office, where he writes his bestsellers and records his radio shows. The futuristic 1950s TV show Flash Gordon jump-started his interest in science. Watching it as a kid, Kaku realized that it was the problem-solving scientist, not the chiseled crimefighter Flash, who was really the hero. Originally published May 20, 2011.
http://www.sciencefriday.com
When it rains, it blooms. Beneath Death Valley lies a massive seed bank of desert wildflowers, and when heavy winter rains soak deep into the soil, these hidden wonders spring to life. Some call this growing spree a "beautiful revolution against the tyranny of the desert," while others simply refer to it as a "superbloom."
Produced and Directed by Christian Baker
Edited by Brian McAllister
Music by Audio Network
Brewing coffee is a never-ending science project, according to barista Sam Penix, owner of Everyman Espresso in New York City. Grind-size, brew method, coffee beans (which are really seeds), water temperature can all affect the flavors that end up in your cup. Harold McGee, author of On Food and Cooking, explains some of the chemistry of coffee.
http://sciencefriday.com
Everything is a little bit magnetic, says physicist Richard Hill, of The University of Nottingham. So with a powerful magnet, it is possible to levitate almost anything--strawberries, water, insects. In a recent study, Hill levitated fruit flies to see how they behaved when they didn't have gravity pulling them down.
A few years ago, Science Friday, in collaboration with microbiologist Vince Fischetti and his lab at The Rockefeller University, conducted an experiment looking into a perennial holiday concern: will alcohol kill bacteria in homemade eggnog? We bring you the results. Please note: the sample size in this study is rather small, a single batch of nog.
Imagine what you might do if you could print your own solar panels. That's kind of the dream behind Shawn Frayne and Alex Hornstein's Solar Pocket Factory -- although they see it more as the "microbrewery" of panel production rather than a tool for everyone's garage. With over $70,000 of backing from a successful Kickstarter campaign, the inventors are now working on refining the prototype. If all goes well, by April they'll have a machine that can spit out a micro solar panel every few seconds. In the meantime, Frayne stopped by Flora Lichtman's backyard with a few pieces of the prototype to explain how the mini-factory will work.
Cockroaches are constantly grooming themselves, says entomologist Coby Schal of North Carolina State University. To clean its antenna, a cockroach will grab ahold of it with its front leg, bring the antenna to its mouth, and run the antenna from base to tip through its mandibles like a piece of floss. Publishing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Schal and colleagues investigate the benefits of clean antennae.
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Luminescent Millipedes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjVNnkvZvR0&feature=share&list=UUDjGU4DP3b-eGxrsipCvoVQ
Rhino Beetles: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ih_98UtAJSQ&list=UUDjGU4DP3b-eGxrsipCvoVQ&index=21
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Collisions between two spiral galaxies can be spectacular affairs, filled with drama and romance. Dr. Barry Rothberg of the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics in Potsdam, details how the massive events play out and why the fate of our own galaxy, the Milky Way, could already be sealed.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Footage and Galaxy Visualizations Courtesy of NASA; ESA; and F. Summers, STScI;
G. Besla, Columbia University; and R. van der Marel, STScI
Patrik Jonsson, Greg Novak and Joel Primack, UC Santa Cruz, 2008
V.Springel, Heidelberg University, Germany
T.J. Cox, Voxer
Phillip Hopkins, California Institute of Technology
Lars Hernquist, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
Large Binocular Telescope Corp., Barry Rothberg and the Leibniz Institute for Astrophysics, Potsdam