downloadable movies to look at. Most of these are 1+ megabytes,
so
can't really download unless you have a fast connection.
http://www.open-video.org/
open video project. Many very large videos, some small, some poor
quality,
some good, but lots and lots of different topics. One interesting one
is
"Anatomy of a Hurricane"
http://lisar.larc.nasa.gov/
NASA Langley Research Center - Multimedia
Repository. This has lots of movies. Where it says "With
multimedia type", click on movies and search.
http://atic.phys.lsu.edu/aticweb/Video.html
The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) Scientific
Balloon
Experiment. This page shows the preparation for launch, and the
launch of the ballloon.
http://www.green.tv/
videos on line about environmental stuff, from greenpeace, UNEP.
http://www.kenkenkikki.jp/zukan/e_movie_h.html
construction equipment, such as tractors, cranes, etc.
Most of the
movies
must have been made just for demonstration, as they dig dirt and then
dump
it in the same spot.
http://www.swisstrac.ch/english/FAQ/
tiny tractor for pulling wheelchairs. Really these are advertisements
for
a commercial product, but they are videos of this tractor.
http://ahga.org/videos.php
Arizona Hang Glider Association, video's of take off, landing. Also
lots
of pictures.
http://www.kettering.edu/~drussell/demos.html
Acoustics and Vibration Animations, by Dan Russell, Ph.D., Associate
Professor
of Applied Physics at Kettering University in Flint, MI. Not movies,
but
this site shows animations of Superposition of Two Waves -
Interference,
Standing Waves, and Beats, Longitudinal and Transverse Waves - Particle
Motion for Longitudinal, Transverse, Water and Rayleigh Surface Waves,
and bunch of other vibrations. All load when you load the page. My four
year old found it interesting.