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Every explanation we've ever written. Search, filter, explore.
What was the first ever piece of music?
Music is ancient β humans have been making sounds and songs for tens of thousands of years. But finding the very first piece of music is a brilliant puzzle.
Who were the ancient Greeks?
The ancient Greeks invented democracy, the Olympics, and pizza... well, maybe not pizza, but they did create the foundations of Western civilisation.
Who was Nelson Mandela?
Nelson Mandela spent 27 years in prison for fighting racism, then became South Africa's first Black president and changed a nation forever.
What was the Age of Exploration?
Between 1400 and 1600, brave explorers sailed into uncharted waters to find new trade routes, accidentally discovering entire continents along the way.
What is acid rain?
The clouds are turning into weak battery acid and falling on our heads β but don't worry, it's not as scary as it sounds.
Why is the ocean salty?
The ocean tastes like a massive bowl of soup that's been cooking for billions of years, collecting salt from every rock on Earth.
What is deforestation?
Every second, we lose forest the size of a football pitch β but why does this happen, and what does it mean for our planet?
How do plants reproduce?
Plants have some surprisingly clever tricks for making baby plants β and they don't all involve flowers and bees like you might think.
What is soil made of?
Soil isn't just dirt β it's a bustling underground city packed with rocks, rotting leaves, tiny creatures, and secrets that make all life possible.
How do deserts form?
Deserts aren't just sandy wastelands β they're the result of epic battles between air, water, and geography that have been raging for millions of years.
What is biodiversity?
From tiny bacteria to massive blue whales, biodiversity is like nature's enormous library β and we're still discovering new 'books' every day.
How do caves form?
Deep beneath your feet, water has been slowly carving out magnificent underground palaces for millions of years.
What is an ecosystem?
An ecosystem is like a giant puzzle where every living thing fits together perfectly β and if you remove just one piece, the whole picture changes.
How do ocean currents work?
Massive rivers of water flow through our oceans like invisible highways, carrying heat around the planet and controlling weather patterns worldwide.
What is the Oort Cloud?
There's a giant invisible bubble of icy rocks surrounding our entire solar system, and it's where the most spectacular comets come from.
What is a dwarf planet?
Dwarf planets are like the forgotten middle siblings of our solar system β too big to be asteroids, but not quite big enough to be proper planets.
How did the Moon form?
The Moon was born from a cosmic crash so violent it melted our entire planet and flung molten rock into space.
What are nebulae?
These cosmic clouds of gas and dust are star nurseries, star graveyards, and some of the most beautiful sights in the universe.
What is the solar wind?
The Sun blasts invisible particles into space at a million miles per hour, creating a cosmic breeze that shapes our entire solar system.
What is a pulsar?
Imagine a lighthouse spinning so fast it flashes 700 times per second β that's basically what pulsars are, except they're dead stars in space.
How does a hard drive work?
Inside your computer is a spinning disc that stores your photos, games, and files using tiny magnetic dots β like a record player for data.
What is augmented reality?
Augmented reality lets you see digital things mixed into the real world around you β like PokΓ©mon appearing in your garden or trying on glasses without touching them.
What is cybersecurity?
Cybersecurity is like having digital bodyguards protecting your computer from invisible thieves who want to steal your information.
What is wealth inequality?
Some people have millions while others struggle to buy food β but why does this happen, and what does it mean for everyone?
How do supermarkets make money?
Supermarkets use clever tricks beyond just marking up prices β from premium placement fees to their own-brand products that cost less to make.
How does the minimum wage work?
The minimum wage is like a speed limit for pay β it sets the lowest amount employers can legally pay workers per hour.
What is foreign aid?
When countries help each other out with money, supplies, or expertise, it's called foreign aid β but why do they do it, and does it actually work?
What is a reflex?
Your body has a secret ninja defence system that reacts faster than your brain can even think β and it's been keeping you safe your whole life.
How do your kidneys work?
Your kidneys are like tireless janitors, cleaning your blood 24/7 and deciding what your body keeps and what gets flushed away.
What is the periodic table?
It's like the ultimate cheat sheet for everything in the universe β every atom that exists has its own special spot on this brilliant chart.
What is the nervous system?
Your nervous system is like your body's electrical network, sending lightning-fast messages between your brain and every part of you.
How do antibiotics work?
These tiny medicine warriors hunt down bacteria in your body like microscopic bouncers, but they're completely useless against viruses.
What is a gene?
Genes are like instruction manuals written in a secret code that tell your body how to build everything from your eye colour to your height.
Why do we hiccup?
Hiccups are a weird glitch in your body β but there's actually a reason your diaphragm throws a tantrum.
What is blood made of?
Blood isn't just a red liquid β it's a complex mix of cells, proteins, and tiny messengers all doing different jobs.
What's the difference between a virus and a bacterium?
Both can make you ill, but viruses and bacteria are completely different things β and that's why different medicines treat them.
What is radiation?
Radiation sounds terrifying, but sunlight is a form of it β the word just means energy travelling through space.
How does a camera work?
Every photo you take captures light in a fraction of a second β here's the clever physics behind the picture.
How does 3D printing work?
A 3D printer can make almost any physical object from scratch β by building it up one incredibly thin layer at a time.
What is a data centre?
"The cloud" isn't actually in the sky β it's in enormous buildings full of computers, cooled by industrial air conditioning.
What is a supernova?
When a massive star dies, it doesn't go quietly β it explodes with more energy than the sun will produce in its entire lifetime.
What is the Milky Way?
That faint band of light stretching across the night sky is actually our home β a galaxy of 200 billion stars we're living inside.
What is space debris?
Earth is surrounded by a cloud of broken satellites and rocket parts β and it's becoming a serious problem for space travel.
What is the Kuiper Belt?
Beyond Neptune's orbit lies a vast ring of icy objects β and it's probably where most comets come from.
Could we ever travel to another star?
The nearest star is so far away that our fastest rockets would take 70,000 years to reach it β but scientists have ideas.
What is the water cycle?
The water in your glass has probably been a cloud, a glacier, and part of a dinosaur's body β it never gets used up, just moved around.
What is symbiosis?
Some animals and plants have built such useful partnerships that neither can survive without the other any more.
What is bioluminescence?
Some animals can glow in the dark by making their own light β and it's all down to a chemical reaction inside their bodies.
How do hurricanes form?
A hurricane is basically a massive heat engine powered by warm ocean water β and when conditions are right, nothing can stop it.
What is the carbon cycle?
Carbon moves between the air, oceans, plants, and animals in a continuous loop β and humans are currently breaking that loop.
What was the suffragette movement?
A century ago, women in Britain weren't allowed to vote β the suffragettes fought, and sometimes went to prison, to change that.
What was the Silk Road?
For over a thousand years, a network of trade routes connected China to Europe β and traded far more than just silk.
What was the moon landing?
In 1969, two humans walked on the moon for the first time β an achievement so audacious that some people still don't believe it happened.
How does the James Webb Space Telescope work?
Webb can see galaxies that formed just a few hundred million years after the Big Bang. It does this by catching light that has been travelling for nearly 14 billion years β here's how.
What is a space station?
A space station is a home in orbit β a place where astronauts live and work hundreds of kilometres above Earth, moving so fast they see 16 sunrises every single day.
What is an asteroid?
Asteroids are lumps of rock and metal left over from the birth of the Solar System. Most orbit quietly between Mars and Jupiter β but some cross Earth's path, and we're now learning how to deal with them.
How do wildfires spread?
A wildfire can move faster than a person can run and leap between trees like a living thing. Understanding exactly how they spread helps explain why they've become so much more destructive.
What is permafrost?
Beneath the soil in the Arctic, the ground has been frozen solid for thousands of years. As the planet warms, it's thawing β and releasing a gas that could dramatically accelerate climate change.
How do animals communicate?
Whales sing songs that carry thousands of miles. Bees dance directions to food sources. Elephants talk in sounds too low for us to hear. Animals have complex languages β just not ones we fully understand yet.
What is a glacier?
A glacier is a river of ice that moves so slowly you can't see it β but given enough time, it carves valleys, shapes mountain ranges, and stores a significant chunk of Earth's fresh water.
What was the Viking Age?
For 300 years, Norse warriors and traders from Scandinavia sailed seas most people thought were impassable, reaching North America, the Middle East, and everywhere in between. The Vikings were far more than raiders.
What is a tariff?
When countries buy and sell things from each other, governments can slap an extra charge on imported goods. That charge is a tariff β and it ripples through every price you pay.
What is the gut microbiome?
Your gut is home to trillions of bacteria, viruses, and fungi that affect your digestion, immune system, and even your mood. Far from being harmful, most of them are essential.
Why do petrol prices go up so much?
One day a tank of petrol costs Β£60, the next it costs Β£80. Nothing changed about your car β so why does the price keep bouncing around?
What is the immune system?
Your body is under constant attack from bacteria, viruses, and other threats. The immune system is the remarkable defence network that fights them off β usually without you noticing.
What causes allergies?
Your immune system treats peanuts like a mortal threat. Pollen makes you sneeze for weeks. Why does the same system that defends you sometimes attack harmless things?
What is the International Space Station?
A football-pitch-sized laboratory has been continuously inhabited in orbit since 2000. Here's what happens up there β and how it stays in the sky.
Why are astronauts weightless in space?
Astronauts float around the space station β but Earth's gravity is nearly as strong up there as on the ground. So what's actually happening?
How do rainbows form?
A rainbow is sunlight and rain working together to split white light into every colour at once. Here's the precise physics of how it happens.
How do trees communicate?
Trees can warn each other about insect attacks, share nutrients with their neighbours, and support their young. They do it without brains, nerves, or a single word.
What is plastic doing to the ocean?
Over 8 million tonnes of plastic enter the ocean every year. Here's where it goes, what it does, and why it's so hard to clean up.
Who were the Vikings?
They raided monasteries, crossed the Atlantic 500 years before Columbus, and founded cities across Europe. The Vikings were far more than just the horned-helmet myth.
What was the Black Death?
Between 1347 and 1351, a pandemic killed somewhere between 30β60% of Europe's entire population. It was the deadliest event in human history.
What was the British Empire?
At its height, the British Empire covered a quarter of Earth's land surface and ruled a quarter of its people. Here's how it rose, how it worked, and how it ended.
Who built the pyramids?
The Great Pyramid of Giza is 4,500 years old, contains 2.3 million stone blocks, and took about 20 years to build. Who actually did it β and how?
What is democracy?
Democracy is over 2,500 years old β and arguably the most debated idea in political history. Here's what it actually is and why it matters.
What is the Magna Carta?
In 1215, a group of rebellious barons forced King John to sign a document that would, over the next 800 years, shape the idea of rights and law for the entire world.
How do rockets work?
Getting to space requires escaping Earth's gravity with nothing but controlled explosions. Here's the physics of how rockets actually work.
What are exoplanets?
Until 1992, we only knew of planets in our own Solar System. Since then, we've found thousands of worlds orbiting other stars β and some look very familiar.
How is a star born?
Stars don't just appear. They form over millions of years in vast clouds of gas and dust β and the process is one of the most dramatic in the universe.
What is a comet?
Comets are ancient, dirty snowballs left over from the formation of the Solar System β and when they get close to the Sun, they put on one of nature's finest shows.
What is a solar eclipse?
The Moon is 400 times smaller than the Sun but also 400 times closer. This coincidence produces one of the most spectacular events visible from Earth.
What are galaxies?
Our Sun is just one of 100β400 billion stars in the Milky Way. And the Milky Way is just one of roughly 2 trillion galaxies. Here's what they are and how they form.
How do bees make honey?
Honey is flower nectar, transformed by tens of thousands of bees working in a precisely coordinated process. Here's the full story.
Why do animals migrate?
Every year, billions of animals travel thousands of kilometres with no maps, no GPS, and no guarantee of survival. Here's why they do it β and how.
What causes climate change?
The planet has warmed by about 1.2Β°C since the Industrial Revolution. Here's what's causing it and why even small temperature changes matter enormously.
How do spiders make webs?
Spider silk is stronger than steel by weight and more elastic than rubber. The engineering behind a spider web is genuinely extraordinary.
Why do animals go extinct?
99% of all species that have ever existed are extinct. Extinction is normal β but what's happening now is not normal at all.
How do fish breathe underwater?
Fish need oxygen just like you do β but they extract it from water instead of air. The system they use is remarkably efficient.
What is the food chain?
Everything eats something, and something eats everything. The food chain maps these relationships β and when any link breaks, the whole chain shudders.
What is camouflage?
From flounder fish that match the seabed pixel-for-pixel to stick insects that look exactly like sticks β the arms race between predator and prey has produced astonishing disguises.
What is the ozone layer?
A thin layer of gas 15β35km up shields all life on Earth from radiation that would make it uninhabitable. We nearly destroyed it β and then we didn't. Here's the whole story.
What is interest?
Interest is the price of borrowing money β and the reward for saving it. Understanding it is one of the most useful things you can ever learn.
How does GPS work?
Your phone knows exactly where you are on Earth to within a few metres, at all times. Here's the elegant maths that makes it possible.
What is an algorithm?
Algorithms decide what you see on social media, who gets a loan, and what music gets recommended to you. Here's what they actually are.
How do batteries work?
A battery is basically a controlled chemical reaction in a can β turning stored chemical energy into electricity on demand.
What is coding?
Every app, website, and piece of software was built by someone writing instructions in a language computers can follow. Here's what that actually involves.
Why do we have seasons?
It's nothing to do with how far Earth is from the Sun. It's all about tilt β and the answer is stranger than you'd think.
What is gravity?
It keeps you on the ground, holds the Moon in orbit, and shapes the entire universe. But what actually <em>is</em> it?
What is evolution?
Every living thing on Earth β from oak trees to blue whales to you β is related. Here's the process that produced all that extraordinary variety.
How does the human eye work?
Your eye captures millions of data points every second and sends them to your brain as electrical signals. Here's the remarkable mechanics behind it.
Why do we need sleep?
You spend about a third of your life unconscious. Sleep isn't wasted time β it's when some of the most important work your body does actually happens.
How does sound travel?
Sound isn't a thing β it's a movement. Understanding how vibrations travel through air (and other materials) explains everything from music to thunder.
What causes the Northern Lights?
Curtains of green, purple, and pink light dancing across the night sky. It's one of the most spectacular things nature produces β and it's caused by the Sun bombarding Earth.
How does the brain work?
The most complex object known to exist in the universe weighs about 1.4kg and sits in your skull. Here's a beginner's guide to the thing doing the reading right now.
What is a chemical reaction?
Chemistry isn't just something that happens in labs. It's happening inside your body right now, in your food, in the air. Here's what a chemical reaction actually is.
What was the Industrial Revolution?
In about 100 years, Britain went from a farming society to a factory-powered empire. It changed the world more profoundly than almost any event in history.
Why is the sky blue?
The sun's light is actually all the colours at once. So why does only the blue bit reach your eyes? Here's the weird truth.
Why do we dream?
Every night your brain puts on a private cinema just for you. Scientists still aren't totally sure why β but they have some pretty fascinating ideas.
What is DNA?
Inside almost every cell in your body is a set of instructions so long it would fill 3,000 books. That's DNA β and it basically built you.
What causes thunder and lightning?
A thunderstorm is basically a massive static electricity machine in the sky. Here's exactly what's happening up there.
How does electricity work?
You use it every single day. But what actually is electricity, and how does it get from a power station to your phone charger?
How do banks make money?
Banks keep your money safe and don't charge you for it. So how are they some of the most profitable businesses on earth?
How does the internet work?
You use it constantly, but the internet is a genuinely mind-bending engineering achievement. Here's how data gets from anywhere to your screen.
What is artificial intelligence?
AI can write essays, recognise your face, beat world champions at chess, and recommend your next favourite song. What's actually going on inside it?
What is the Big Bang?
The entire universe β every star, planet, galaxy, and atom in existence β began about 13.8 billion years ago in a single, almost incomprehensible moment.
Why does the Moon affect the tides?
Twice a day, the ocean rises and falls by several metres β and it's all because of a rock 384,000 km away. Here's the physics.
How big is the universe?
The universe is so big that the numbers stop making any kind of intuitive sense very quickly. Let's try anyway.
Why do leaves change colour in autumn?
Every autumn, millions of trees put on one of nature's great colour shows. It's not random β it's the tree doing some very clever chemistry.
How do volcanoes work?
Deep beneath your feet, the rock is so hot it's liquid. Sometimes, it finds a way out.
What causes earthquakes?
The ground beneath your feet is in slow, constant motion. When two sections suddenly slip past each other, the result can be devastating.
How do plants make food?
Plants do something remarkable: they pull food out of thin air using sunlight. It's called photosynthesis, and without it, almost nothing on Earth could survive.
What was the Second World War?
The deadliest conflict in human history. Between 1939 and 1945, it killed an estimated 70β85 million people. Here's how it started and why it matters.
What is inflation?
Why does a can of Coke cost more than it did when your parents were kids? That's inflation β and it affects everything.
How does Wi-Fi work?
How does the internet get from a box in your hallway to your phone without any wires? It's basically invisible radio.
What is a black hole?
A place in space where gravity is so strong that not even light can escape. Yes, really.
Why do we pay taxes?
Nobody likes paying tax. But without it, no roads, no NHS, no schools. Here's how it actually works.
How do vaccines work?
Vaccines train your immune system to fight diseases before you ever get ill. It's like a fire drill for your body.