Chemistry & Physics 1 min Read

16 Golden Retrievers Explain Atoms

A team of golden retrievers were trained to illustrate the structure of atoms - the particles that make up everything around you.

Fact Checked Human Written Verified Sources Regularly Updated

I learnt all about atoms in secondary school and remember nothing about it.

This is how schools should teach physics, it’d stick in my head for a lot longer!

A crack team of PhD-trained golden retrievers illustrate the structure of atoms – the particles that make up everything around you.

They also show how atoms are weirder than you might think.

There’s nothing better than learning with cute dogs, especially when they’re golden retrievers.

Even if you can’t focus on the educational aspect, it’s still fun to watch.

And of course science aside, you’ll have to choose which of the well trained dogs here is your favorite.

Feel free to share this with your friends or classmates, maybe it will help you pass your next science exam!

Pets Teach Science

YouTube video

Your Reaction

Share This

References

About The Author

Luke Ward
Owner

Luke Ward is the owner of FactstoryHub. He has over 14 years of experience in researching, informative writing, fact-checking, SEO & web design. In his spare time, he loves to explore the world, drink coffee & attend trivia nights.

Our Promise

All the articles on our site are written by humans, using verified sources and human fact checkers.

Fact Checked All our articles are checked for accuracy by our writers, editors, and community of fact-entusiasts.
Human Written Our facts are written by experienced human writers. We do not use AI to generate our facts.
Verified Sources We check each fact against multiple sources and provide links to the most reputable.
Regularly Updated We aim to update articles when new information becomes available or when they become outdated.

Help Us Fact Check

The facts on this page were verified using our rigorous fact-checking process. We work hard to keep every detail accurate and up to date, but information can change, or mistakes can slip through. If you notice anything that does not seem right, we would love your help. Let us know using the form below, and we will review it as soon as possible.