Extraordinary Learning Experiences

Take fascinating science courses with leading scientists and extraordinary teachers, but most importantly with other brilliant and curious minds from around the world.

Course Preview

Our learning platform allows for dynamic engagement with students from around the globe with high quality lectures, interactive demonstrations, and discussion communities.

This is an example of part of a WSS course taught by Breakthrough Prize winner Cumrun Vafa.

This interactive demonstration simulates the famous double slit experiment, demonstrating that light behaves like both a particle and a wave. Set the sliders to your desired values, and then press “Run” to start the experiment.

Scholars can interact with each other and with teaching fellows by sharing ideas and questions related to the course material.

Past Courses

More information about A Beautiful Universe

A Beautiful Universe

In this course, you’ll use simple, but challenging, mathematical puzzles to explore and gain familiarity with mathematical concepts ubiquitous in physics, and in particular string theory. Then you’ll dive into string theory proper and probe some of the underlying principles that string theorists use to reconstruct the fundamental laws of physics.

  • Physics & Math
More information about Light-Matter Interaction at the Nanoscale

Light-Matter Interaction at the Nanoscale

In this course, Professor Menon will discuss some of his lab’s research into how matter can be designed to interact with, and ultimately control, light. You’ll learn about methods scientists have designed to reflect and trap light, with applications to lasers, photovoltaics, and neural networks.

  • Physics & Math
  • Tech & Engineering
More information about Revealing Reality

Revealing Reality

This introductory course with Professor Brian Greene covers three main topics: special relativity, general relativity, and quantum mechanics. These topics represent the extremes of speed, mass, and length in nature. As humans, we experience nature in a limited way, and as much as we may believe that we know how the world works, we are limited by only a few orders of magnitude in speed, mass, and length. Our experience is also colored by the way nature behaves within those orders of magnitude. This course addresses the tension between our experience of reality and the true nature of reality.

  • Physics & Math
More information about The Biology of Memory

The Biology of Memory

In this course, Professor Alberini will walk you through some of her lab’s research into the processes involved in forming, storing, and retrieving memories; the systems in the brain responsible for these processes; and the cellular mechanisms that underlie these processes. You’ll also be exposed, and have a chance to explore, many of the open questions in this field.

  • Biology & Life
More information about The Computational Universe: A New Kind of Science

The Computational Universe: A New Kind of Science

This course with Stephen Wolfram will explore the computational universe. As the power of AI and machine learning, as well as our reliance on those capabilities, increases exponentially, our future may depend less upon controlling these algorithms and programs than on communicating with them in a language that they and humans can easily understand. Examine several of Professor Wolfram’s principles, including the Principle of Computational Irreducibility and the Principle of Computational Equivalence, to help understand the importance of computational language.

  • Physics & Math
  • Tech & Engineering

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