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Eureka!

All Episodes 1980 - 1981

  • Ended
  • #<Network:0x00007fd13dcb7440>
  • 1980-01-01T05:00:00Z
  • 5m
  • 10m (2 episodes)
  • Canada
  • English
  • Animation
Eureka! is a Canadian educational television series which was produced and broadcast by TVOntario in 1980. The series was narrated by Billy Van, and featured a series of animated vignettes which taught physics lessons to children. It is currently available online. Eureka! was also broadcast on some PBS stations in the United States.

30 episodes

Series Premiere

1980-01-01T05:00:00Z

1x01 Inertia

Series Premiere

1x01 Inertia

  • 1980-01-01T05:00:00Z5m

How can physics be about movement if nothing wants to move? Ah, but forces in the universe make things move and stop moving. But at heart, the first rule of physics says: ""Things like to keep doing what they're already doing.""

1x02 Mass

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This program introduces the kilogram as a way to measure the mass of an object, and proves that small things can me more massive than large things.

1x03 Speed

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Expert ball-handling proves force varies with mass and speed.

Force varies with mass and rate of change of speed. It's much easier to stop a slow-moving cannonball than a rapid tennis ball.

It takes only a few seconds for something to accelerate to a max speed. This is demonstrated with a vintage locomotive.

1x06 Gravity

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What is gravity? Through the fictional story of Newton's apple, we learn about gravity and shed some light on weight.

1x07 Weight vs. Mass

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Physics has to be specific in distinguishing weight from mass. This is why physicists measure weight in newtons.

1x08 Work

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How much work are you doing? Whatever the force you apply is measured in newton meters–or joules, after James P. Joule.

1x09 Kinetic Energy

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The physics of billiard balls begins the first of two programs on energy itself.

David and Goliath characters demonstrate how potential energy differs from kinetic energy.

Season Premiere

1981-01-01T05:00:00Z

2x01 The Inclined Plane

Season Premiere

2x01 The Inclined Plane

  • 1981-01-01T05:00:00Z5m

How can someone lift a very heavy load? If one could slice the load into pieces, that would trade increased distance for decreased effort. But since one can't break things because they are so heavy, the inclined plane comes into play.

2x02 The Lever

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A teeter-totter is the perfect demonstration of the lever, particularly if you are trying to ride a teeter-totter with someone heavier than you. Such is the Principle of the Lever.

Two professors compete to see who can lift a book with a lesser amount of force. The professor who uses a lever is more efficient than the inclined plane, once we factor in a basic double-edged sword called friction.

All machines in the world can be traced to just two: the inclined plane and the lever. Even the wheel is just a circular lever whose fulcrum has become an axle. The screw? It's just a spiraling inclined plane.

2x05 The Pulley

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Jack and Jill went up the hill and found a problem: how can they pull a pail of water from the bottom of a well? In this expanded nursery story, we find there is more to a pulley–and its mechanical advantage–than meets the eye.

The first of six shows on heat and temperature, introduces molecules. Even though a solid object looks motionless, its molecules move back and forth in a lattice-work dance.

This episode sacrifices a chocolate rabbit on a hot day to illustrate the movement of molecules in liquids.

No end of problems await the man who keeps fish for pets. Evaporation forces one to refill the tank. And he who thinks he can outsmart water vapor by keeping his fish in a refrigerated water tank, falls prey to Nature's countermeasure: condensation.

This lecture-packed show compares a balloon to a bunch of angry wasps to explain why gases expand and contract. It goes further than that. The expansion process also affects matter when it changes from one state to another.

Given three bathtubs of varying temperature, the star of the show ""blunts"" his feet so that they can't tell temperature. Sure they can't. The human body can only tell changes in temperature in comparison to what it had been used to. It's up to an independent device: a thermometer and the scale devised by Anders Celsius.

What is better to warm up a kiddie pool: a teacup of boiling water (100° Celsius) or a bucket of water at 50° Celsius? The answer tells you the difference between temperature and heat.

2x12 Atoms

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There's more to matter than the molecules we had spent discussing in the previous six shows. This fourth unit produces that first look at atoms.

2x13 Electrons

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An atom is made of mostly empty space. The electrons in an atom zoom around at fantastic speeds to create existence out of something that is mostly nothingness (at the atomic level).

2x14 Conduction

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All objects conduct heat, of course, but get a look at objects from the atomic level and you'll see why some objects conduct heat faster than others.

2x15 Volume and Density

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To set up audiences for The Convection of Heat, this question is posed: how can you fit eight junky cars into a small space?

2x16 Buoyancy

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How come an anchor is easier to lift if it's in the water than in open air? It lies in the density of an object versus a certain quantity of water.

2x17 Convection

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Now that the Principle of Buoyancy is understood, one can fully grasp The Convection of Heat. This is demonstrated with a furnace not being in the attic of a house.

2x18 Heat as Energy

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An animated Count Rumford demonstrates, for the first time, how heat can be used to produce energy. The show converts a Calorie as the amount produced from 4200 joules of work.

2x19 Radiation Waves

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Why does somebody stand in the shade on a hot day? This show introduces the third method by which heat can be transferred: radiation.

Is it just your imagination that you are warmer when you wear dark clothes over white clothes? That actually sets off a reveliation on what color really is.

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