Top Vídeos
It's floating all around you, all the time—a wafting cloud formed by billions of bacteria that slough off your body with every movement you make. At the Biology and the Built Environment Center at the University of Oregon, researchers have revealed that not only can they detect and catalog this personal microbial cloud, but each person's cloud is unique.
More Microbe Week videos! (Click "show more" for links)
BrainCraft: Good Sleep = Good Gut? https://youtu.be/jkjqQXX47KE
Gross Science: What Really Causes Cavities? https://youtu.be/WU05zZJKSdE
AMNH: Microbes of New York https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTdeZU_8cLI
Science Friday: Your Very Special Bacterial Cloud https://youtu.be/2_ib7Z4bmrg
Inspired by the Secret World Inside You exhibition http://www.amnh.org/exhibition....s/the-secret-world-i
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network and Ego Plum's Live Performance of Raymond Scott's "In the Hall of the Mountain Queen"
Additional Video by The American Museum of Natural History
Microbe Stills by B. Peterson © AMNH
Special Thanks to Roxana Hickey, Jessica Green, Ashley Bateman, Clarisse Betancourt and Erin Chapman
Effortlessly, manta rays glide through the ocean gulping down plankton and fish eggs by the mouthful. However, until recently, it wasn't clear how they managed to do so without clogging the filters that surround their gills. Marine biologist and biomechanist, Dr. Misty Paig-Tran details her research into these graceful giants and reveals the multiple methods of filtration they use to sift a meal from the water.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Filmed by Luke Groskin, Ryan Hawk, Christian Baker
Music by Audio Network
Footage by Misty Paig-Tran, Shutterstock, Anita Ong (C.C. 3.0)
Dirk Hondhel (C.C. 3.0), Kimberly Forbragd (C.C. 3.0), Patrick Yeo Ho Yoon (C.C.3.0)
As the owner of Casa Della Mozarella, a world-famous Italian deli on New York City's Arthur Avenue, Orazio Carciotto has been making mozzarella for over 30 years. During that time, Orazio has learned that mastering the flavor and texture of this silky smooth cheese requires a deft (and burn-resistant) hand and a mastery of milk curd chemistry. Now, he bestows the tricks of his trade upon you!
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Production Assistance and Cheese Slicing by Rachel Bouton
Additional Video by Xochitl Garcia
http://www.sciencefriday.com
Although it's well known that seahorses and their cousins the pipefish are the only vertebrates where males become pregnant, researchers have only begun to understand how this unique adaptation works. By studying the behavior of these charismatic fishes and sampling the RNA within the male's pouch, biologist Tony Wilson and his lab at Brooklyn College have found that seahorse pregnancy may have a deeper genetic link to other forms of pregnancy than previously thought.
Produced by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Additional Stills and Video by
Tony Wilson, Pond5, SeahorseConservancy.org , Randy Perry (C.C. BY 2.0), Elaine Blum, Shutterstock, Horsepower the Movie (CC. BY 2.0)
Special thanks to
Natalie Cash, Jeff Morey, Tony Wilson, Sunny Scobell,
and Frieda Sutton
BASE stands for the objects the practitioners of the sport jump from: buildings, antennas, spans, earth. Wingsuits are sometimes involved; parachutes, always. Luke Hively, who has racked up 2500 skydives and more than 150 BASE jumps, wondered about the physics of wingsuits. Physicists Leif Ristroph and David Hu weigh in. We wondered about the brain science of jumping off cliffs, and asked neuroscientist Chess Stetson about why time seems to slow down when we're scared.
*** http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions ***
Cuttlefish change the patterns on their body for courtship rituals, when they eat a snack, and most famously when they want to blend in. How they change their skin patterns may tell us something about how they see the world, says Duke biologist Sarah Zylinski. Her work suggests that when cuttlefish see incomplete shapes, they fill in the visual blanks -- much like humans do. Can't get enough saltwater camouflage? Watch: "Where's The Octopus?"
photographs, footage: sarah zylinski, archival: archive.org, produced by flora lichtman
Many parents know the feeling of needing a moment's peace from their children, and the easiest way to achieve that is to distract them with a smart phone. But what if instead of mindlessly playing Candy Crush, kids could play an arcade-style game integrating biology and technology? Working out of Genspace — the citizen science hotspot in Brooklyn — biologist Oliver Medvedik and computer programmer Keith Comito discuss how they developed a kit where live single-celled organisms play a game called the BioArcade.
Produced by Katie Free and Sylvia Tippman
Music by Audio Network, Ellie Kid, Kevin Mcleod
Special thanks to Kevin Comito, Oliver Medvedik, Nurit Bar-Shai
Electric eels zap fish and other underwater prey, but what would make them leap out of the water and shock an animal like a horse? Nineteenth-century naturalist and explorer Alexander von Humboldt first described eels emerging from the water to attack horses, and now Kenneth Catania of Vanderbilt University uses some unique props to reveal shocking insights about the behavior.
CREDITS
Produced by Emily Driscoll
Filmed by Jeff Nash
Narration by Luke Groskin
Alexander von Humboldt voiced by Eric Kuhl
Music by Audio Network
Additional Video by Kenneth Catania Lab
Photos and Images by Emil Du Bois-Reymond, Otto Roth, Robert Schomburgk, Shutterstock, Alexander von Humboldt, Friederich Georg Weitsch
Thanks to
Kenneth Catania, Luke Groskin, Eric Kuhl, David Salisbury
Polaroid's 20x24 cameras, built in the late 70s and named for the dimensions of their snapshots--20 by 24 inches, are the largest living Polaroid cameras in the world. (There was once an even bigger one with 40x80 snapshots but the film has run out.) Five of these 20x24 cameras still exist, and one resides in New York City's 20x24 Studio. The Studio's director, artist John Reuter, demonstrated the 235-pound camera, and Christopher Bonanos, author of Instant: The Story of Polaroid, explained how this camera fits into Polaroid's history.
http://www.sciencefriday.com
t's not just generations of children who have pondered how many licks it takes to reach the center of a lollipop. Mathematicians studying fluid dynamics at NYU's Applied Mathematics Lab designed experiments to watch how lollipops dissolve, and in doing so answered this epic childhood question. Help test their results by taking the Science Friday Lollipop Challenge!
Produced by Emily V. Driscoll
Filmed and Narrated by Luke Groskin
Music by Audio Network
Additional Footage by
Jinzi "Mac" Huang, Nicholas Moore, & Leif Ristroph
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.
Photographs by
NYU Applied Mathematics Lab
Shutterstock
Featuring
Leif Ristroph
Leo Groskin
Saydi Landon
Melanie Soumbasakis
Thanks to
Barry Bowen
James Devitt
Ellen Gordon
Luke Groskin
Jinzi "Mac" Huang
Elizabeth Delucia Landon
Leif Ristroph
Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.
Megan Davies Wykes
A robot that's meant to swim with the fishes. Mechanical engineer Maurizio Porfiri, of the Polytechnic Institute of New York University, designs robot fish. A few years ago, he found that real fish would mill about his aquatic robot, and now he's trying to understand why. His research suggests that it has less to do with how the robot looks, than how it makes fish feel.
Sandor Ellix Katz, self-proclaimed "fermentation revivalist" and author of "The Art of Fermentation" (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2012) discusses the two "cultures."
Related:
Michael Pollan on Science Friday (May 3, 2013) http://www.sciencefriday.com/s....egment/05/03/2013/mi
This device smells. Using DNA, scientists built an electronic sniffing machine.
When two pendulums are attached to each other, their motion is impossible to predict. This swinging pendulum demonstration is brought to you by Science Friday
Spring is here and the birds are migrating. We went birding with Glenn Phillips, executive director of New York City Audubon, to learn some birding basics in preparation for the spring bird migration. Turf wars, death, joy--all in a day of birding.
a-ha『グレイテスト・ヒッツ-ジャパニーズ・シングル・コレクション-』
(DISC1)CD、ワーナ―時代に日本でリリースされたシングル・コレクション、発売順に全19曲収録。
(DISC2)DVD、ミュージック・ビデオ集、17曲中の7曲が日本初DVD化。
¥3,000+税 発売中
<収録曲 >
(Disc 1):CD
1 テイク・オン・ミー
2 シャイン・オン・TV
3 ストレンジャー・トレイン
4 ハンティング・ハイ・アンド・ロウ
5 ルージング・ユー
6 クライ・ウルフ
7 マンハッタン・スカイライン
8 リビング・デイライツ
9 ステイ・オン・ディーズ・ロード
10 ブラッド・ムーヴ・ザ・ボディ
11 タッチィ!
12 ユー・アー・ザ・ワン
13 クライング・イン・ザ・レイン
14 ウェイティング・フォー・ハー
15 ムーヴ・トゥ・メンフィス
16 ダーク・イズ・ザ・ナイト・フォー・オール
17 シェイプス・ザット・ゴー・トゥゲザー
18 サマー・ムーヴド・オン~果てしない夏
19 フォーエヴァー・ノット・ユアーズ
(Disc 2):DVD
1 テイク・オン・ミー
2 シャイン・オン・TV
3 ルージング・ユー(オリジナル・ヴァージョン)(日本初DVD化)
4 マンハッタン・スカイライン
5 ステイ・オン・ディーズ・ロード
6 クライング・イン・ザ・レイン
7 ダーク・イズ・ザ・ナイト・フォー・オール(日本初DVD化)
8 ムーヴ・トゥ・メンフィス
9 シェイプス・ザット・ゴー・トゥゲザー (日本初DVD化)
10 エンジェル・イン・ザ・スノウ (日本初DVD化)
11 サマー・ムーヴド・オン~果てしない夏
12 遥かなる空と大地
13 ライフラインズ (日本初DVD化)
14 ディッド・エニワン・アプローチ・ユー (日本初DVD化)
15 ヴェルヴェット
16 バタフライ (日本初DVD化)
17 テイク・オン・ミー(1984ヴァージョン)
Hunting high and low A-Ha Lyrics GOstou comenta, n gostou comenta msm assim
Original BBC Broadcast VHS-Rip.
Cover Norwegian Idol 2007 (3)
Idol 2007 fikk deltagerne i oppgave og tolke a-ha sine låter.
Åste Hunnes Sem synger Hunting High and Low.
I love this version of the song....the extended remix. I thought I'd add sunsets and angels to it.
This song is just the prettiest love song from A-ha...a fragile longing for the love of your life. Eloquent lyrics....
LYRICS: Hunting High and Low -- a ha
Here I am
And within the reach of my hands
She's sound asleep and she's sweeter now
Than the wildest dream could have seen her
And I Watch her slipping away
Though' I know I'll be hunting high and low
High
There's no end to the lengths I'll go to
Hunting high and low
High
There's no end to lengths I'll go
To find her again
Upon this my dreams are depending
Through the dark
I sense the pounding of her heart
Next to mine
She's the sweetest love I could find
So I guess I'll be hunting high and low
High
There's no end to the lengths I'll go to
Hunting High and Low
High
Do you know what it means to love
I'm hunting high and low
And now she's telling me she's got to go away
I'll always be hunting high and low
Hungry for you
Watching me tearing myself to pieces
Hunting high and low
High
There's no end to the lengths I'll go to
Oh, for you I'll be hunting high and low
"a-ha-Hunting High And Low (Extended Remix)", sound recording administered by:
WMG (I do not own rights to this music)