Right now, somewhere out there, there's an educator is delivering a mind-altering lesson to their class. Adam: Savage: I want to engage your brains in this. Chris Anderson: I tried to get my head around how vast our Earth is. Logan Smalley: But that lesson only reaches the students in that room. What would happen if we could capture that lesson? AS: This is a toothed wheel. LS: What if pro animators and visualization artists could bring that lesson to life? CA: It's an object we see everyday that would literally fit one million Earths. AS: It's got a bunch of notches, and it's got a bunch of teeth. This was Fizeau's solution. LS: When that lesson lands, curiosity is ignited. CA: It seems impossibly big. AS: Something interesting happens. CA: In the great scheme of things, it's just a pinprick. AS: A door is starting to close on the light beam that's coming back to his eye. LS: Then that group of students is one thought closer to being what every teacher hopes their students will become: a lifelong learner. AS: Based on the distance between the two stations... CA: The quest for knowledge and understanding never gets dull. AS: He calculates the speed of light to within two percent of its actual value. CA: The more you know, the more amazing the world seems. That's the central mission of TED-Ed: to capture and to amplify the voice of the world's greatest teachers. AS: He does this in 1849. CA: It's the crazy possibilities, the unanswered questions, that pull us forward. So stay curious. [TED-Ed: Lessons Worth Sharing]