632nm by Misha Shalaginov, Michael Dubrovsky, Xinghui Yin

Last Updated: June 14, 2026
Technical interviews with the greatest scientists in the world.
Bioelectricity, Morphogenesis, and Two-Headed Worms | Michael Levin
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How can a flatworm regenerate a complete head after being cut in half?

Quantum Architecture, QAOA, and Cancer Biomarkers | Fred Chong
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Are quantum computers changing the way we discover cancer treatments?

How Quantum Sensors Can Measure Single Electrons | Amir Yacoby
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How do you measure something as small as a single electron or map quantum behavior at the nanoscale?

The Physics of Un-Hackable Face Recognition | Rob Devlin on Metalenz
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How do you turn a flat piece of nanostructured material into a secure biometric sensor?

The Real Economics of Data Centers in Space | Starcloud CEO Philip Johnston
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Are data centers in space physically possible, or just another overhyped idea?

How To Make Quantum Algorithms Cheaper | Craig Gidney on Magic-State Factories, Resource Estimates
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How do you actually make quantum algorithms work on real hardware?

How Neurons Translate Electricity into Chemistry | Tom Südhof
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How do neurons convert electrical signals into chemical messages in under a millisecond?

How Engineers Solve “Impossible” Problems | Dan Gelbart
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How do engineers solve problems that seem to violate the laws of physics?

How Visual Experience Rewires the Brain | Mark Bear on Neuroplasticity
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How does experience rewire the brain—and why is vision the ideal system for understanding neuroplasticity?

Snell's Law, Metasurfaces, and Metalenses | Federico Capasso
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How can flat surfaces shape light as powerfully as bulky lenses?

Graphene, Nanotubes, and Quantum Hall Physics | Philip Kim
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How do electrons behave when they’re confined to a single layer, and why do entirely new laws of physics emerge when dimensions shrink?

Quantum Matter, Super-conductors, and Black Holes | Subir Sachdev on the SYK Model
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What makes high-temperature superconductors and “strange metals” some of the most perplexing systems in modern physics?

How to Build Fault-Tolerant Quantum Computers | Austin Fowler on Surface Codes + TQEC
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Would we get a quantum computer sooner if everything was open source?

Why Syncing Atomic Clocks is Virtually Impossible | Judah Levine on UTC
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Why is syncing atomic clocks still one of the hardest problems in physics and engineering?

Can We Predict History Like the Weather? | Peter Turchin on Cliodynamics
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Why do civilizations rise, prosper, and then collapse? Here's what the math tells us.

Why Do Quantum Computers Make So Many Mistakes? | Mikhail Lukin on Quantum Error Correction
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You can’t copy a qubit. So how do quantum computers remember anything?

We Interviewed the Winners of the Ig Nobel Prize | Ig Nobel 2025
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The scientific stories behind this year's research that made people LAUGH, then THINK.

What Science can Learn from Startups | Adam Marblestone on Focused Research Organizations
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Science has stalled. And Adam Marblestone thinks he knows why.

The Perfect Pasta Sauce According to Italian Physicists | Ig Nobel 2025
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Cheese is serious stuff. The physics behind cacio e pepe.

Babies Love When Mom’s Milk Tastes Like Garlic | Ig Nobel 2025
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Your milk tastes like garlic. And babies love it.

How to Boost a Narcissist’s Self-Confidence | Ig Nobel 2025
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What happens to our sense of self when someone tells us we’re smart—or not so smart?

What Optical Atomic Clocks Tell Us About Space-Time | Jun Ye
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Times have changed. And cesium clocks can't keep up.

Laser Cooling and Quantum Timekeeping | Bill Phillips
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How did cooling atoms with lasers revolutionize our understanding of time?

Inside the Battle for Psychedelic Therapy | Rick Doblin
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What does it take to turn a banned psychedelic into an FDA-approved medicine?

Biology's Biggest Chicken and Egg Problem | Jacob Fine
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Life’s First Blueprint Wasn’t DNA; it was RNA.

The Final Interview with MIT Physicist Keith Johnson
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One of Keith Johnson’s final interviews: a brilliant mind on dark matter, water, and fusion.

How We Build Telescopes to Explore the Early Cosmos | Brian Keating
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Did the Big Bang really happen? Telescopes, dark matter & cosmic origins explored.

Quantum Complexity: Scott Aaronson on P vs NP and the Future
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, Scott Aaronson shares his early fascination with calculus at age 11 and how “rediscovering” old mathematics led him toward groundbreaking work in complexity theory. He gives a lucid explanation of P vs NP, revealing how seemingly trivial questions about verifying solutions speak to some of the deepest unsolved problems in all of computing.

Science Memes, Epigenetic Inheritance, and Rethinking Peer Review
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, we explore cutting-edge ideas in epigenetics and academic publishing. Oded Rechavi reveals how C. elegans worms defy conventional genetics by passing on traits through small RNAs, and discusses how these mechanisms might reshape our understanding of heredity. We also hear about a remarkable experiment hijacking Toxoplasma gondii—the so-called “cat parasite”—to deliver proteins into the brain, opening possible routes for new therapies.

Quantum Diamond Sensing: The Surprising Power of NV Centers
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, we explore how diamond-based nitrogen vacancy (NV) centers went from being a curiosity in gemstone physics to a transformative tool for precision magnetometry. You’ll hear how these tiny defects enable room-temperature quantum sensing, providing ultra-high spatial resolution and remarkable resilience in extreme conditions—from planetary research unlocking secrets of our solar system’s earliest days to potential biomedical diagnostics. Our guest recounts the serendipitous connections, engineering challenges, and surprising scientific discoveries along the way.

Origin of Life, Thermodynamics, and God: Jeremy England
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In this episode, Jeremy England reframes the origin of life debate by applying non-equilibrium physics, challenging the notion that life’s emergence must be purely biological or chemical. He describes how matter can “learn” from its environment, drawing on examples from spin glasses, protein folding, and resonating mechanical systems.

Flux Grant by 1517 Fund: Backing Garage Science and Sci-Fi Tech
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, we sit down with 1517 Fund’s Danielle Strachman and Michael Gibson to explore their Flux program, a unique pre-seed fellowship backing wild, unorthodox scientific and technical ideas. They share how they’ve helped founders transform “garage science” projects—like nuclear batteries, quantum computing prototypes, and cutting-edge materials—into serious startups. Along the way, they discuss the pitfalls of chasing academic prestige, the power of genuine curiosity, and how to leverage minimal resources for big ambitions.

Trapped Ion Quantum Computing: Christopher Monroe of IonQ
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, our guest traces the evolution from the early days of Bose-Einstein condensation experiments to pioneering trapped ion quantum gateways. He reveals how breakthroughs in laser cooling and atomic clock research unexpectedly paved the way for the first quantum logic gates, beating out the BEC community at a pivotal conference. We also hear about the surprising roles of entanglement, error mitigation, and photonic interconnects in shaping modern quantum hardware.

Maintaining Moore's Law: Lithography, Semiconductors, and Chip Fabrication with Mordechai Rothschild
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, we explore how 193nm lasers unexpectedly overtook x-ray approaches and reshaped semiconductor manufacturing. Physicist Mordechai Rothschild describes the breakthroughs that turned a once “impossible” technology into the mainstay of chip fabrication, including the discovery of specialized lenses, the invention of chemically amplified resists, and the game-changing flip to immersion lithography. We also hear candid insights on the race to push below 13.5 nanometers, where new ideas in plasma sources and advanced coatings might one day carry Moore’s Law even further.

Quantum Cascade Lasers: Federico Capasso on Curiosity and Bell Labs
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In this episode, physicist Federico Capasso recounts his winding path from struggling undergrad to pioneering inventor of the quantum cascade laser. He reveals how openness, daring ideas, and the bottom-up ethos at Bell Labs led to breakthroughs that redefined semiconductor research.

How Edison Inspired Eli Yablonovitch to Create Four World-Changing Inventions
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Eli Yablonovitch shares how Thomas Edison's approach of requiring "a thousand failed discoveries for every one that works" shaped his scientific philosophy. From solar cells to semiconductor lasers to photonic crystals to cell phone antennas, Yablonovitch reveals how each invention evolved from identifying fundamental physics concepts that others overlooked. He explains how his light-trapping concept now used in every solar panel stemmed from thinking about statistical mechanics. His strained semiconductor laser design, which initially faced industry resistance, eventually became the standard in all laser pointers and DVDs. Throughout his career spanning Bell Labs, Exxon, and academia, Yablonovitch demonstrates that true innovation comes from understanding basic physics principles and having the courage to pursue ideas others dismiss as impossible.

From Failed PhD to Nobel Prize | John Mather’s Journey to Revolutionize Astronomy
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Join the 632nm team as we sit down with Nobel laureate Dr. John Mather. From his childhood days of building radios and telescopes to leading NASA's groundbreaking COBE mission, learn how a spectacular failure during his PhD research unexpectedly paved the way for his Nobel Prize-winning work. And hear the story of how NASA took a chance on a 28-year-old scientist who would change our understanding of the universe.

Hunting for Alien Artifacts | Avi Loeb
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Join the 632nm team as we sit down with Harvard Professor Avi Loeb, in this fascinating exploration of astronomy, alien life, and the intersection of science and politics. From discussing the mysterious interstellar object that changed astronomy to explaining why Mars might not be the best destination for human colonization, Loeb challenges conventional wisdom with evidence-based insights. His unique perspective, shaped by his journey from growing up on a farm in Israeli to becoming a leading Harvard scientist, reminds us to think from first principles about the universe’s biggest questions.

Are We Doomed? | Dan Aronovich on Norbert Wiener's 1948 “Cybernetics”
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In this episode, the 632nm team sits down with Dan Aronovich (Data Science Decoded Podcast) to explore predictions about technology and society, starting with MIT pioneer Norbert Wiener's remarkably prescient warnings about AI from 1948. His concerns about artificial systems misinterpreting human instructions mirror modern discussions about AI alignment, while his skepticism of social sciences raises important questions about the limitations of studying human behavior.

Information, Entropy & Reality | MIT Professor Seth Lloyd on Quantum Computing
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The 632nm team sat down with MIT professor Seth Lloyd for a mind-bending journey through quantum mechanics, information theory, and the early days of quantum computing. Lloyd shares fascinating stories from his pioneering work in quantum information, including how he nearly got expelled from his PhD program for pursuing what was then considered a "crazy" research direction. Through engaging examples and personal anecdotes, he explains why quantum mechanics is "irreducibly weird" and how information and entropy are fundamentally the same thing.

From Medieval Glass to Nobel Prize | Moungi Bawendi on Mastering Quantum Dots
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In this episode, the 632 team interviewed Nobel laureate Moungi Bawendi, revealing his serendipitous journey to the discovery and development of quantum dots. From a summer internship at Bell Labs to an expired bottle of chemicals that contained the perfect mixture, Bawendi shares how some of chemistry's biggest breakthroughs came from unexpected places. He draws remarkable connections between medieval stained glass artisans and modern nanotechnology, explaining how thousand-year-old techniques unknowingly pioneered the manipulation of nanoparticles.

How a Vision Disorder Led to Shocking Brain Science Discoveries | Mark Bear on Neuroplasticity
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In this captivating episode, we explore how Mark Bear's personal experience with congenital nystagmus sparked a revolutionary career in neuroscience. Mark shares his remarkable journey from struggling with a visual impairment to making groundbreaking discoveries about how the brain processes visual information, including the identification of a previously unknown neural pathway discovered during his undergraduate years.

The Current Reality of Quantum Computing | Yudong Cao on Deploying Quantum for Real-Life Problems
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In this eye-opening episode, former Zapata Computing CEO Yudong Chen reveals the sobering truth about quantum computing's potential impact on drug discovery and the industry's inflated market expectations. Chen explains why even with perfect quantum chemistry calculations, the business case for quantum computing in pharmaceuticals falls dramatically short of the billions being invested, with a total addressable market of only around $100M.

From Failed Project to 40 Million Eye Scans: David Huang on the Birth of OCT
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Dr. David Huang shares the remarkable journey of how a failed laser surgery project during his MD-PhD studies at MIT led to the invention of Optical Coherence Tomography (OCT), now used in over 40 million eye procedures annually. The story includes a pivotal moment when Professor James Fujimoto volunteered as the first human subject for OCT testing when no other students would agree to have an experimental laser pointed at their eye.

Origins of Life | Anna Wang on Artificial Cells and Nano-Robots
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Origins of life researcher Anna Wang takes us on a fascinating journey through the latest theories about how life began, revealing why Darwin's "warm little ponds" are making a comeback and how ocean spray droplets may have served as nature's first test tubes. She explains why early cell membranes were more like soap bubbles - fragile and leaky - and how these imperfections were actually crucial for primitive life to function.

The Future of Fusion | Dennis Whyte on Nuclear Fusion and MIT Plasma Science
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MIT Professor Dennis Whyte's path to becoming a fusion energy pioneer began with an unlikely source - a Ripley's Believe It or Not comic strip he read as a teenager in rural Saskatchewan. The comic described how a bottle of water could theoretically contain the energy equivalent of 100 barrels of oil through fusion, sparking a lifelong fascination that would shape his career.

Origins of Life | Jack Szostak on Basement Experiments to Nobel Prize-Winning Discoveries
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Nobel laureate Jack Szostak takes us on a fascinating journey through his remarkable scientific career, from conducting dangerous chemistry experiments in his basement as a curious child to making groundbreaking discoveries about telomeres that would earn him the Nobel Prize. He reveals how a forgotten DNA sample in his freezer led to fundamental insights about chromosome stability, and explains why studying unusual organisms often leads to the biggest scientific breakthroughs.

The God Particle | Christoph Paus on Higgs Boson, CERN, and CMS
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Professor Christoph Paus, a key figure in the discovery of the Higgs Boson at CERN's Large Hadron Collider, discusses his journey in high-energy physics, the challenges of leading large international collaborations, and the future of particle physics. As one of the co-conveners of the CMS Higgs physics group during the historic discovery, Paus provides unique insights into how the detection of this elusive particle was achieved through careful experimental design, data analysis, and team coordination.

Cold Atoms: Mikhail Lukin on Quantum Optics and Neutral Atom Computing
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In this episode, Harvard Professor Mikhail Lukin discusses his pioneering work in quantum computing using neutral atoms. He shares the journey from his early work in quantum optics and electromagnetically induced transparency to developing programmable quantum processors using arrays of individually trapped atoms. 

Einstein Was Wrong: John Clauser on Bell's Theorem and the Nature of Reality
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In this episode, we sit down with Nobel laureate John Clauser to discuss his experiments from the early 1960’s, testing Bell's inequalities and quantum entanglement. Clauser shares the story of how, as a graduate student, he proposed testing quantum mechanics against Einstein's local realism - an idea that most prominent physicists, including Richard Feynman, dismissed as a waste of time. Despite the skepticism, Clauser persisted and conducted the first experimental tests that showed quantum mechanics was correct and Einstein was wrong about quantum entanglement.

The Science of Drug Discovery: Insights from Artem Evdokimov
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In this episode, drug discovery scientist Artem Evdokimov discusses the science of pharmaceutical development, from historical breakthroughs to the current landscape. He shares insights on antibiotics resistance, the obesity drug Ozempic, and technical details of drug screening methods like DNA-encoded libraries. 

Optical Metatronics: Nader Engheta on Electromagnetics and Scientific Curiosity
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In this episode of the 632nm podcast, Nader Engheta shares his journey and experiences within the field of electromagnetics, from his early days at the University of Tehran and Caltech, to his current research in optical metatronics and nonlinear dynamics. 

Quantum Computing: Peter Zoller and Ignacio Cirac on the Quantum Revolution
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In this episode of the 632-nanometer podcast, we explore the evolution of quantum computing with theoretical physicists and experimentalists Peter Zoller and Ignacio Cirac, two pioneers in the field. They recount their personal journeys and discuss key breakthroughs in the development of trapped ion quantum computing.

Gravitational Waves: Rainer Weiss (Nobel Prize 2017) on Laser Interferometer Observation
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In 1916, Einstein predicted the existence of gravitational waves, however, it took almost a century for researchers to detect them. In this episode of the 632-nanometer podcast, the team has a fireside chat with Rainer Weiss, the man behind the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-wave Observatory and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics for the observation of gravitational waves. 

Synthetic Biology: George Church on Genome Sequencing and De-Extinction
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The great George Church takes us through the revolutionary journey of DNA sequencing from his early groundbreaking work to the latest advancements. He discusses the evolution of sequencing methods, including molecular multiplexing, and their implications for understanding and combating aging. We talk about the rise of biotech startups, potential future directions in genome sequencing, the role of precise gene therapies, the ongoing integration of nanotechnology and biology, the potential of biological engineering in accelerating evolution, transhumanism, the Human Genome Project, and the importance of intellectual property in biotechnology. The episode concludes with reflections on future technologies, the importance of academia in fostering innovation, and the need for scalable developments in biotech.

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