Watch Clip
How to Build Your Dragon
2m 17s
Game of Thrones got us thinking — what would a real dragon look like?
NOVA brings you stories from the frontlines of science and engineering, answering the big questions of today and tomorrow, from how our ancestors lived, to whether parallel universes exist, to how technology will transform our lives. Visit the official website to watch full-length documentaries, or explore our world through short-form video, on our digital publication NOVA Next.
Video description: The asteroid released the equivalent of 10-billion nuclear bombs worth of energy when it struck Earth. The impact started a chain of events that wiped out 75% of all plants and animals at the time.
Game of Thrones got us thinking — what would a real dragon look like?
How can the science of learning help us rethink the future of education for all children? Airing September 14, 2016 at 9 pm on PBS
Want to find another world beyond our solar system? Here are the 5 ways you can do it.
What should you do with the borax you have leftover from making slime? Make crystals!
Follow the emergency in Flint from the switch in water supply to today’s health crisis.
Actor Joe Morton, narrator of “Poisoned Water,” discusses the Flint water crisis.
The WannaCry cyberattack cost the economy billions of dollars. Here's why that's scary.
LeeAnne Walters, of Flint, Michigan, helps save the city from a lead water crisis.
These extinct frogs used to barf up their babies—and now scientists are trying to bring them back from the dead. Discover more in this episode of Gross Science.
In this special report, NOVA investigates what happened in Flint, Michigan when local officials changed the city’s water source to save money, but overlooked a critical treatment process. As the water pipes corroded, lead leached into the system, exposing the community—including thousands of children—to dangerous levels of poison. NOVA uncovers the science behind this manmade disaster.
Gross Science explores hand hygiene, with some help from the show Clean My Space.
For almost 13 years, the spacecraft Cassini has been in the Saturn system, documenting the planet and its moons. Cassini’s days are numbered—on 15 September, it will be sent hurtling towards Saturn. But just because it’s running out of fuel doesn’t mean it’s running out of fire. Cassini has a lot more science to do in its final chapter.
During WWII, Nazis forced Samuel Bak and his family out of their home in Vilna, Lithuania.
In a forest in Lithuania, a team of scientists searches for traces of a vanished people.
At ground zero for the final solution, scientists uncover a story of hope and bravery.
Hana Amir describes her father escaping the Holocaust through a tunnel he helped to dig.
Check out the new streaming service from Cascade PBS, which pairs your PBS favorites with an ever-growing selection of TV series and films from around the world. Enjoy dedicated mobile and TV apps.