Cooking with sunlight and producing electricity using Peltier modules
Pocketful of sunshine: build a solar cooker and learn about the thermoelectric effect with Peltier modules.
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Pocketful of sunshine: build a solar cooker and learn about the thermoelectric effect with Peltier modules.
Have you ever seen a blue cow? A blue apple? Or a blue tree? Blue is rare in nature, so why are some plants and animals blue?
In a spin: use a rotating platform to explore how gravitational acceleration affects a simple pendulum.
Enhance your students’ knowledge of electrolysis using quick, safe, and easy microscale chemistry techniques.
Set the wheels in motion: maximize your creativity by using old bicycle parts to create art installations and demonstrate energy conversions.
Seeing science in a new light: build your own stroboscope and use it to create beautiful optical illusions with water!
Help students develop STEAM skills by building a smart lamp with this creative project that combines physics, programming, and art and design.
Why was a Nobel prize awarded for 'click chemistry'? Learn about the ground-breaking advance behind this simple-sounding name.
Learn how fluorescence microscopy can illuminate our gut microbiome and its role in cancer.
Thinking outside the box: explore the nature of science by building LEGO mystery boxes and challenging your students to solve the puzzle.
Cooking with sunlight and producing electricity using Peltier modules
Colour in nature: true blue
The centrifugal force awakens
Elegant electrolysis – the microscale way
From cycling to upcycling: learn about energy conversions by building creative installations from old bicycles
‘Defying’ gravity with a simple stroboscope
Design and build a smart lamp
Click does the trick: understanding the 2022 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Shedding light on the gut microbiome
The mystery box challenge: explore the nature of science