Let's draw the continents and oceans
This YouTube video will guide you through a fun activity where you will draw the earth's continents and oceans.
This YouTube video will guide you through a fun activity where you will draw the earth's continents and oceans.
This online tutorial guides you through what information a map shows, map legends and the different types of maps which are available.
This unit is about how things move along a straight line or, more scientifically, how things move in one dimension. Examples of this would be the movement (motion) of cars along a straight road or of trains along straight railway tracks.
In this lesson you will learn:
In this chapter, we’ll use vectors to expand our understanding of forces and motion into two dimensions. Most real-world physics problems (such as with the game of pool pictured here) are, after all, either two- or three-dimensional problems and physics is most useful when applied to real physical scenarios. We start by learning the practical skills of graphically adding and subtracting vectors (by using drawings) and analytically (with math). Once we’re able to work with two-dimensional vectors, we apply these skills to problems of projectile motion, inclined planes, and harmonic motion.
You want a projectile to fly as far as possible, at which angle should you launch it? We'll start with formulas for the initial velocity.
Osmosis is the movement of water across a semi-permeable membrane from an area of low solute concentration to an area of high solute concentration. Osmosis helps regulate the flow of water in and out of cells, which is crucial to their function.
Other objects in the solar system are discussed in this online textbook viz. asteroids, meteorites, comets and dwarf planets.
This short online lesson discusses the planet Jupiter.
This short online lesson explores the planet Mars.