Video games using procedural generation
Astroneer is a sandbox adventure game developed by indie game developer System Era Softworks. The game was released through early access in December 2016 before a full release on December 16, 2019. The player is tasked with colonizing planets, creating structures, and collecting resources. The character the player moves is called an Astroneer and the player can travel to planets to activate cores and complete the game. There are often rewards given to the player upon completion of core activation, most notably a suit and/or visor. (Wikipedia).
AWESOME antigravity electromagnetic levitator (explaining simply)
Physics levitron (science experiments)
From playlist ELECTROMAGNETISM
From playlist the absolute best of stereolab
Get 500 Microsoft Rewards Points for completing one easy achievement!
Hey all, this is a quick walkthrough of the Microsoft Rewards app on your Xbox to show you how to get rewards points, as well as completing a very easy quest that gets you 500 points! Microsoft Rewards points can be used to redeem an Xbox game pass membership as well as gift cards. If you
From playlist Xbox series X
Unusual Radio Signals From Distant Stars Are Probably Hidden Planets
Good telescope that I've used to learn the basics: https://amzn.to/35r1jAk Get a Wonderful Person shirt: https://teespring.com/stores/whatdamath Alternatively, PayPal donations can be sent here: http://paypal.me/whatdamath Hello and welcome! My name is Anton and in this video, we will tal
From playlist Unusual Exoplanets
Astroneer REVIEW - December 2016 [SPACE GAMES]
Hello and welcome to What Da Math?! Star Rangers is an interesting, yet somewhat buggy video game with a lot of educational potential and somewhat cool sandbox elements. In a nutshell, you're a new astronaut recruit with a mission to go to space and colonize planets in our solar systm. In
From playlist Space Games REVIEW
http://www.teachastronomy.com/ Astrology, or the belief that objects in the sky can control or influence human affairs, has absolutely no scientific basis. It does however have a long and interesting history dating back thousands of years. The Babylonians used astrology 5 thousand years
From playlist 01. Fundamentals of Science and Astronomy
Why is this Space Telescope so Tiny?
Optical Engineer Rik ter Horst shows us how he makes very small telescopes (at home) which are intended for use in micro-satellites. Contents: 0:00 Intro 1:06 About telescopes and focal length 3:35 The Cassegrain telescope 4:38 The Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope 5:18 The monolithic telesco
From playlist optics
500 particles in an elliptical billiard. The segments are velocity vectors, the two dots are the focal points of the ellipse. C code: https://www.idpoisson.fr/berglund/vid_particles_ellipse.c Music: Cold Blue by Astron@Sound Therapy - Best Sleep and Relaxation Music For more informati
From playlist Particles in billiards
Vortex formation behind a soft obstacle
This simulation is a further step towards hopefully succeeding in simulating von Kármán vortices in a fluid flow behind an obstacle. It shows a flow of increasing mean velocity around a circular obstacle. An interesting feature is that two symmetric vortices that form behind the obstacle a
From playlist Fluid dynamics (Euler and similar equations)
A compressible Euler flow in a funnel: Vorticity and direction of flow
This is a variant of the video https://youtu.be/m-lXsoH1Xpg showing the same simulation, but with different color gradients. Instead of showing the speed and pressure, this video shows the vorticity and the direction of the flow. The average speed of the fluid is imposed by fixing the vel
From playlist Fluid dynamics (Euler and similar equations)
Harmonic Sums and Divergence of Harmonic Series (visual proof)
This is a short, animated visual proof showing a formula for the sum of harmonic sums using triangular diagrams. As a bonus feature (watch until the end), we utilize this formula along with a theorem due to Ernesto Cesáro to prove that the Harmonic Series diverges. #math #manim #harmonicse
From playlist Finite Sums
How Does a Quartz Watch Work? | James May's Q&A | Earth Lab
James May looks at how quartz watches actually work. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/SubscribeToEarthLab Taken from James May Q&A Ep 26. Best of Earth Lab: http://bit.ly/EarthLabOriginals Best of BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/TheBestOfBBCEarthVideos The Doctors Are In The House: http://bit.ly/Th
From playlist James May's Q&A
Why Do We Call Them 'Astronauts'?
Ever wonder the difference between an 'Astronaut' and a 'Cosmonaut'? Well, have a seat and get comfortable because SciShow Space will tell you all about it. Hosted by: Caitlin Hofmeister ---------- Support SciShow by becoming a patron on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scishow --------
From playlist SciShow Space
stereolab - puncture in the radax permutation
check this out
From playlist the absolute best of stereolab
Strontium - Periodic Table of Videos
Our new strontium video includes a trip to the village of Strontian, a flame test and some footage of nuclear explosions! More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/
From playlist Radioactive - Periodic Videos