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Physics World Weekly Podcast

Physics World

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Physics World Weekly offers a unique insight into the latest news, breakthroughs and innovations from the global scientific community. Our award-winning journalists reveal what has captured their imaginations about the stories in the news this week, which might span anything from quantum physics and astronomy through to materials science, environmental research and policy, and biomedical science and technology. Find out more about the stories in this podcast by visiting the Physics World web ...
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Radio Physics

Marisa Walbert

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Radio Physics is for everyone! You don't have to be a scientist or even an aficionado to be fascinated by the questions and answers that you'll hear on KDNK. Radio Physics is a collaboration with top high school physics students from Aspen to Rifle, the Aspen Center for Physics, and KDNK Community Radio in Carbondale. Students interview one of the more than 1,000 physicists who visit the Aspen Center for Physics every year.
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People doing Physics

Cavendish Laboratory

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As fascinating as physics can be, it can also seem very abstract, but behind each experiment and discovery stands a real person trying to understand the universe. Join us at the Cavendish Laboratory on the first Thursday of every month as we get up close and personal with the researchers, technicians, students, teachers, and people that are the beating heart of Cambridge University’s Physics department. If you want to know what goes on behind the doors of a Physics department, are curious to ...
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Physics is full of captivating stories, from ongoing endeavours to explain the cosmos to ingenious innovations that shape the world around us. In the Physics World Stories podcast, Andrew Glester talks to the people behind some of the most intriguing and inspiring scientific stories. Listen to the podcast to hear from a diverse mix of scientists, engineers, artists and other commentators. Find out more about the stories in this podcast by visiting the Physics World website. If you enjoy what ...
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Rabbi Shlomo Ezagui, a veteran Rabbi of forty years, author of www.maimonidesadvice.com and www.aspiritualsoulbook.com, a Pioneer Rabbi in Palm Beach, Florida, who started the first Orthodox Minyan and Mikvah there, now brings all his knowledge and experience to the field of Quantum Physics and Science. This Show will educate and demonstrate the incredible parallels between the fields of science and our age-old eternal wisdom and the practices of our traditions. It will broaden your understa ...
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Most founders are stuck in the pain cave - and no one can tell them why. This podcast is for founders who want to understand why some startups take off and other's don't. - With Rob Snyder (3x founder, Harvard Innovation Lab fellow, ex-HBS and McKinsey). - Practical insights to help founders escape the pain cave and build profitable businesses. PMF newsletter: https://howtogrow.substack.com Work with Rob: https://www.robsnyder.org Contact: [email protected]
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Physics Porn Podcast

Fathan Muhammad

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Physics Porn Podcast bukan podcast bokep daks. Podcast ini bakal nuntasin hal-hal yang tabu, aneh, ga urgen sih, yang diulas dari sisi fisika tapi yaa pastinya isinya faedah, bermanfaat, dan nambah wawasan. Kuy dengerin!
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Learn about quantum mechanics, black holes, dark matter, plasma, particle accelerators, the Large Hadron Collider and other key Theoretical Physics topics. The Rudolf Peierls Centre for Theoretical Physics holds morning sessions consisting of three talks, pitched to explain an area of our research to an audience familiar with physics at about second-year undergraduate level.
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Theoretical Physics Schools (ASC)

The Arnold Sommerfeld Center for Theoretical Physics (ASC)

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Every year the Arnold Sommerfeld Center (ASC) for Theoretical Physics at the LMU in Munich organizes a school for PhD students. It covers topics which are of current interest in theoretical physics and range from more applied fields like condensed matter physics to rather mathematical fields like string theory. Announcements of upcoming schools can be found on the ASC schools webpage and a list of past schools can be found in the archive of the ASC schools.
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Physics With Me

PhyGuys 3

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This podcast is my attempt to learn Physics by talking about it. It is on the level of students of Engineering and basic sciences in their undergrad or higher levels of education.
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Learning About Teaching Physics

Stephanie Chasteen

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We're getting the physics education research out of those stuffy journals and into your hands (or, rather, ears) with this little audio podcast. Co-hosted by veteran high school physics teacher Michael Fuchs and physicist and education researcher Stephanie Chasteen, each episode investigates a piece of the research literature and how it can relate to your classroom. Main website on PER User's Guide On iTunes On Compadre
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Get Your Physics On

John D. Solis, Ph.D.

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This video podcast series presents basic information to teachers on how to set-up and use the equipment mentioned in the Get Your Physics On! lessons and activities. http://www.thetrc.org/web/physics.html There are sixteen episodes that are included and they each incorporate the equipment specified in the Physics TEKS 2F and 2G.
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Physics of the Human Body

Richard Ingebretsen

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These interesting podcasts come from the University of Utah Department of Physics and Astronomy and describe how physics is utilized by the human body for every day activities like blood pressure, running vision, breathing, and hearing. They talk about how strokes are caused, blisters are formed ,how sun screens work and how diseases are caused. Listen as Richard ingebretsen MD, PhD helps us understand how physics helps to operate our bodies.
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This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Pat Hanrahan, who studied nuclear engineering and biophysics before becoming a founding employee of Pixar Animation Studios. As well as winning three Academy Awards for his work on computer animation, Hanrahan won the Association for Computing Machinery’s A.M. Turing Award for his contributi…
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Discovery is very important - but it's poorly understood what exactly you should be looking for in the first moments of a sales call and founders almost always screw it up. This leads to a confused customer being grilled with random questions and the founder struggling to connect with the customer and generate interest in their product (the wrong w…
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'Humility, Oil, and Wisdom: The Essence of Hanukkah' by Rabbi Shlomo Ezagui, explores the spiritual and practical significance of olive oil as it relates to the Jewish holiday of Hanukkah. The author uses the physical properties of olive oil—such as its purity, non-mixing nature, and tendency to rise—as a metaphor for spiritual growth and the acqui…
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In this episode, Roger Price continues to explore the fascinating dual nature of light, explaining how it sometimes behaves like a wave and other times like a particle. Through a discussion of wave interference patterns and the famous double-slit experiment, Roger draws parallels between these scientific phenomena and the paradoxes encountered in t…
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On this episode of Radio Physics, summer intern Alice Lebedev-Migdal interviews physicist Ned Wingreen.Ned Wingreen is the Howard A. Prior Professor of the Life Sciences at Princeton University. He is a member of the Department of Molecular Biology and Associate Director of the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics, where he is Director o…
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The latest episode of Physics World Stories takes you inside CUWiP+, the Conference for Undergraduate Women and Non-Binary Physicists, and the role the annual event plays in shaping early experiences of studying physics. The episode features June McCombie from the University of Nottingham, who discusses what happens at CUWiP+ events and why they ar…
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Today we’re joined by Verity Allan, who works as a project manager, developer, and programmer of architecture and software for the Square Kilometre Array, which will be the world's largest radio telescope. A graduate of Cambridge, Oxford, and The Open University, Verity came to Cambridge from a town in the Midlands to study Anglo-Saxon, Norse and C…
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This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Guangyu Zhang. Along with his colleagues at the Institute of Physics of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Zhang has bagged the 2025 Physics World Breakthrough of the Year award for creating the first 2D metals. In a wide-ranging conversation, we chat about the motivation behind the team’s res…
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Highly recommend reading this week's Substacak as the language around supply and demand is precise: LINK Rob Snyder dives into how to think about Demand as it relates to AI - using both historical (Ford) and contemporary (Jump, Loveable, AI SDRs) examples. This convo should be helpful for entrepreneurs, investors and marketers thinking about AI, pr…
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This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features a lively discussion about our Top 10 Breakthroughs of 2025, which include important research in quantum sensing, planetary science, medical physics, 2D materials and more. Physics World editors explain why we have made our selections and look at the broader implications of this impressive bo…
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This excerpt from Rabbi Shlomo Ezagui’s 'Ashreinu: The Inward Path to Jewish Completeness' argues that individuals, particularly students, must direct their focus inward toward their Jewish heritage rather than seeking completeness in the external world. The text emphasizes the importance of establishing deep spiritual foundations to sustain convic…
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If you wonder if "PULL" is relevant for your business ("But I sell into enterprise!" "I'm in B2C!" "I sell hardware!" ... " so PULL doesn't apply"), this week's conversation is meant for you. Rob and RC discuss some common examples of selling into large businesses / deep tech / hardware / B2C from a "PULL" perspective. Leave comments with questions…
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This episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast features Tim Hsieh of Canada’s Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. We explore some of today’s hottest topics in quantum science and technology – including topological phases of matter; quantum error correction and quantum simulation. Our conversation begins with an exploration of the quirky …
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Earlier this autumn I had the pleasure of visiting the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo Canada – where I interviewed four physicists about their research. This is the second of those conversations to appear on the podcast – and it is with Bianca Dittrich, whose research focuses on quantum gravity. Albert Einstein’s general th…
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📻 'The Quantum, The Jungian, and The Kabbalist,' outlines a philosophical synthesis combining the principles of Quantum Physics, the psychological concept of Jungian Synchronicity, and the mystical wisdom of Kabbalah. The author argues that reality is not deterministic but rather an infinite field of potentiality that requires a conscious observer …
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PULL (Project-Unavoidable-Looking for options-encountering Limitation) is the key concept that founders need to understand to sell and find PMF. Rob has refreshed his definitions and this conversation dives into topics like: Defining PULL (when customers "rip a product out of your hands") How to use PULL in sales calls SUPER common misconceptions a…
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It is book week here at Physics World and over the course of three days we are presenting conversations with the authors of three fascinating and fun books about physics. Today, my guest is the physicist Daniel Whiteson, who along with the artist Andy Warner has created the delightful book Do Aliens Speak Physics?. Is physics universal, or is it sh…
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⚛️ Rational Mysticism: Maimonides, Abulafia, and Quantum Unity The provided text, an excerpt from Rabbi Shlomo Ezagui's writing 'The Rational Mystic,' examines the philosophical unity between ancient Jewish wisdom and modern scientific discoveries. The author argues that quantum physics, particularly findings related to quantum fields and the obser…
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On this episode of Radio Physics, physicist Flip Tanedo is interviewed by interns Shen Harman & Alice Lebedev-Migdal.Flip Tanedo builds models of dark matter. He grew up in Los Angeles and fell in love with physics after reading The Physics of Star Trek. This carried into degrees in mathematics and physics at Stanford, Cambridge, Durham, and a Ph.D…
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In this episode of Physics World Stories, theoretical physicist, cosmologist and author Paul Davies discusses his latest book, Quantum 2.0: the Past, Present and Future of Quantum Physics. A Regents Professor at Arizona State University, Davies reflects on how the first quantum revolution transformed our understanding of nature – and what the next …
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It is book week here at Physics World and over the course of three days we are presenting conversations with the authors of three fascinating and fun books about physics. First up is my Physics World colleague Michael Banks, whose book Physics Around the Clock: Adventures in the Science of Everyday Living starts with your morning coffee and ends wi…
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Rob and RC dive into three common (and self destructive) sales pathologies that Rob sees in founders: The "Helpful" founder who thinks s/he can sell by showing how helpful they are to customers The "Smart" founder, who thinks that by impressing customers with deep knowledge (or avoiding embarassing oneself), customers will buy And the "Noble" found…
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Like any major endeavour, designing and fabricating semiconductor chips requires compromise. As well as trade-offs between cost and performance, designers also consider carbon emissions and other environmental impacts. In this episode of the Physics World Weekly podcast, Margaret Harris reports from the Heidelberg Laureate Forum where she spoke to …
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To light, time has no meaning. Einstein's theory of relativity proves that time is not constant, and for light time has no meaning at all. Light is truly mysterious. It's omnipresent in a way that only God claims to be. And if you believe this science, and you can't prove it, that's a kind of faith. In this episode of Faith & Physics Uncovered, Rod…
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⚛️ Quantum Faith: Finding God in Science and Torah1 source The provided text consists of excerpts from 'Quantum Faith: Finding God in Science and Torah' by Rabbi Shlomo Ezagui, which argues for reconciling religious belief with scientific understanding. Ezagui utilizes quantum physics to support the concept of a unified, intelligent energy field un…
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Blog post: "Strict Productivity" on https://howtogrow.substack.com/ Work with Rob: www.robsnyder.org Rob and RC discuss productivity based on a foundational understanding of *what is a startup* which is the necessary foundation for doing productive things. Conversation addresses the constraint-theory approach to understanding your startup, identify…
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This episode explores the scientific and technological significance of 2D materials such as graphene. My guest is Antonio Rossi, who is a researcher in 2D materials engineering at the Italian Institute of Technology in Genoa. Rossi explains why 2D materials are fundamentally different than their 3D counterparts – and how these differences are drivi…
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Full Substack post "Customer Success": https://howtogrow.substack.com/ Work with Rob: Info Rob's Miro: https://bit.ly/4q9JiP3 Rob and RC focus on the "post-sell" part of PMF in this convo - customer success and retention. They discuss Rob's thinking on how to define success, what to focus on, and why so many founders are focused on the wrong metric…
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Earlier this year I met the Massachusetts-based steampunk artist Bruce Rosenbaum at the Global Physics Summit of the American Physical Society. He was exhibiting a beautiful sculpture of a “quantum engine” that was created in collaboration with physicists including NIST’s Nicole Yunger Halpern – who pioneered the scientific field of quantum steampu…
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