Upcoming Shows
- Professor Fleshner will build on your new understanding of the immune system and apply it to today’s real world challenges! You will understand more about the virus that causes COVID19 and how our new vaccinations work to keep us from
- Saturday June 11, 2022 Duane Physics G1B30 at 9:30 a.m. Professor Tom Perkins "From Very Small to Very Big: Microscopy and the Powers of Ten!" Learn about how for multiplying or dividing by 10 changes BIG to small and back again
- All kinds of energy conversions will be observed and discussed during "The Chemistry of Energy." The show will demonstrate how lightning bugs convert chemical energy to light energy and how hydrogen can be produced by electrolysis and then
- Join CU Professor of Physics, award winning teacher and CU Wizards for over twenty years Paul Beale, to learn about heat and temperature, from billions of degrees during the big bang all the way down to absolute zero! We will explore heat,
- Mysterious blackholes provide inspiration and challenge to the imaginations of poets, artists, writers, and scientists. Join Professor of Astrophysical & Planetary Sciences Andrew Hamilton for a fun Saturday morning show in person
- Join CU Wizards for December's show "There's Something in the Air!" a program that's all about the Earth's atmosphere. Professor Brown travels the world to study the amazingly thin, invisible, ethereal stuff that blankets our amazing planet
- Batteries are just about everywhere these days but do you know how they work? Did you know you can run a clock with orange juice? Or make a calculator battery from pennies, nails and fruit? Come see the World’s Smallest Electric
- Register Here Professor Micheal Dubson's "BOOM! The Physics of Sound and Music!" will both delight and inform kids of all ages! Saturday, October 30, CU Campus in Duane Physics G1B30 from 9:30-10:30 am Link to
- Aerospace Engineering Professor Brian Argrow, will present "Games of Drones!" This show illuminates unmanned aircraft design. Students will explore concepts related to flight aerodynamics; drag, lift, and thrust by constructing
- Professor David Nesbitt presents a live show from his home kitchen! Chemistry learning is especially fun if learned while doing cooking projects at home! This show will feature the chemistry that helps to explain many of Professor Nesbitt's home