Get curated editors’ picks, peeks behind the scenes, film recommendations and more.
The US research biologist Adrian Smith uses powerful cameras to study – and delight in – how small winged creatures go from grounded to airborne in the blink of an eye. In this video, Smith walks viewers through slow-motion footage of 11 of the most fascinating moths and beetles he’s captured taking flight at the Evolutionary Biology and Behavior Research Lab at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences, which he heads. Highlights include a trio of bioluminescent glow-worm beetles taking off in synchrony, and a waved sphinx moth launching from the tip of Smith’s finger. Combined, these clips form an awe-inspiring peek into the varying strategies insects use for moving into, and through, the air. For more lush visual investigations of insect-flight physics from Smith, watch Moths in Slow Motion and Insects Take Flight.
Video by Ant Lab
video
Physics
A song of ice, fire and jelly – exploring the physics and history of the trumpet
9 minutes
video
Animals and humans
An artist and ants collaborate on an exhibit of ‘tiny Abstract Expressionist paintings’
5 minutes
video
Mathematics
How a curious question about colouring maps changed mathematics forever
9 minutes
video
Physics
A dreamy tribute to the music of Brian Eno, rendered in paint, soap and water
2 minutes
video
Biology
To understand how an animal sees the world, start with the shape of its pupils
5 minutes
video
Technology and the self
Why we should worry less about ‘sentient’ AIs and more about what we’re teaching them
16 minutes
video
Physics
Why does the Sun occasionally flash green as it eclipses the horizon?
7 minutes
video
The environment
Tree-sit with activists as they fight industrial logging from 100 feet above the ground
25 minutes
video
Animals and humans
Scientists brought a wild horse back from extinction. But is it truly the same animal?
5 minutes