How do we separate the seemingly inseparable? - Iddo Magen
View full lesson: http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-do-we-separate-the-inseparable-iddo-magen
Your cell phone is mainly made of plastics and metals. It’s easy to appreciate the process by which those elements add up to something so useful. But there’s another story we don’t hear about -- how did we get our raw ingredients in the first place, from the chaotic tangle of materials that is nature? Iddo Magen uncovers the answer in a group of clever hacks known as separation techniques.
Lesson by Iddo Magen, animation by Augenblick Studios.
Видео How do we separate the seemingly inseparable? - Iddo Magen канала TED-Ed
Your cell phone is mainly made of plastics and metals. It’s easy to appreciate the process by which those elements add up to something so useful. But there’s another story we don’t hear about -- how did we get our raw ingredients in the first place, from the chaotic tangle of materials that is nature? Iddo Magen uncovers the answer in a group of clever hacks known as separation techniques.
Lesson by Iddo Magen, animation by Augenblick Studios.
Видео How do we separate the seemingly inseparable? - Iddo Magen канала TED-Ed
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
How computer memory works - Kanawat SenananWhy can't you divide by zero? - TED-EdWhat really happens to the plastic you throw away - Emma BryceBiodiesel: The afterlife of oil - Natascia RadiceHow to unboil an egg - Eleanor NelsenAre spotty fruits and vegetables safe to eat? - Elizabeth BrauerHow To Separate Solutions, Mixtures & Emulsions | Chemical Tests | Chemistry | FuseSchoolWhy are human bodies asymmetrical? - Leo Q. WanSolid, liquid, gas and … plasma? - Michael MurilloThe invisible motion of still objects - Ran TivonySecrets of the X chromosome - Robin BallWhy do buildings fall in earthquakes? - Vicki V. MayThe language of lying — Noah ZandanCan you solve the penniless pilgrim riddle? - Daniel FinkelHow batteries work - Adam JacobsonHow does your immune system work? - Emma BryceGrammar's great divide: The Oxford comma - TED-EdWhy doesn’t anything stick to Teflon? - Ashwini BharathulaThe immortal cells of Henrietta Lacks - Robin Bulleri