• Anne L'Huillier: Watching electrons and winning Nobel Prizes mid-lecture
    Apr 9 2026

    Hi Darling!
    This week I'm bringing you a conversation with Anne L'Huillier, to talk about the science of attosecond pulses… and the very human journey behind them. Anne is a French-born physicist who works as a Professor in atomic physics at Lund university in Sweden and was the fifth woman to ever win the Nobel Prize for Physics.

    In this interview we discuss the physics behind watching electrons and how attosecond light pulses help us to 'film' them. Anne's path into physics, her love of teaching and the reality of being a woman in physics over the last 40 years. And, of course, Anne describes what it's like to be a Nobel Laureate and the moment she got the call - in the middle of teaching a lecture!

    This is a conversation about physics and teaching but also resilience, curiosity and the human side of being one of the top scientists in the world.

    Until next time, Darling!
    @alexthephysicist

    Show More Show Less
    49 mins
  • International Women's Day: What it's really like to be a woman in STEM in 2026
    Mar 8 2026

    Hi Darling!
    Happy International Women's Day!

    In todays episode I am going to discuss what its really like to be a woman working in science, technology, engineering and maths in 2026. Using personal experiences from myself and people in my community I explore the problems and the power that comes with being a gender minority in STEM.

    Through stories, survey responses, and honest reflection, we’ll talk about the patterns many women still encounter in scientific workplaces today. From subtle microaggressions and being underestimated, to structural barriers that still exist within academia and industry. But this episode is not just about the problems. It’s also about resilience, community, and the incredible women who continue to shape science despite these challenges.

    This conversation is about awareness, accountability, and moving the needle toward a more inclusive scientific culture for everyone.

    Whether you work in STEM yourself, support someone who does, or simply care about the future of science, I hope this episode sparks thoughtful conversation and encourages positive change.

    Thank you to everyone who shared their experiences for this episode. Your voices matter.

    If this episode resonates with you, please consider sharing it with a colleague, lab mate, or friend. Conversations like this are how change begins.
    You can join in the conversation through my social media @alexthephysicist

    Until next time, darling!

    Show More Show Less
    56 mins
  • Kelly Weerman: The Double Life of a Neutrino Physicist and National Athlete
    Feb 12 2026

    Hi Darling!
    In this episode I sit down with experimental particle physicist Kelly Weerman, who works on the Japanese neutrino experiment KamLAND-Zen and is also an athlete in the Dutch National Wushu team.

    We talk about what doing a PhD actually feels like behind the scenes: burnout, motivation, imposter syndrome, and learning how to build a sustainable relationship with work. We also explore her research detecting neutrinos deep underground in Japan, the subsequent trips she got to take, and how training as an athlete shaped the way she approaches science.

    A conversation about science, identity, balance, and the reality of building a life in academia. Kelly is a true inspiration.

    Until next time Darling!
    @alexthephysicist

    Show More Show Less
    55 mins
  • Wormholes, Academia & What Scientists Really Do
    Jan 24 2026

    Hi darling!
    This week I discuss what it is actually like to work in academia and research, and the science behind 'stranger things'... Are scientists “still in school”? Do professors just teach all day? And is the science in Stranger Things even remotely realistic?

    In this solo episode of Alex the Physicist & Friends, I break down what a career in science and academia really looks like, from PhDs and postdocs to permanent academic positions. I talk honestly about the pros, cons, instability, freedom, pressure, and misconceptions that come with working in research, especially in physics.

    We also dive into the real science behind Stranger Things, unpacking wormholes, spacetime, exotic matter, and how much of sci-fi is grounded in real physics (and where it definitely takes creative liberties).
    The paper I mentioned by Kip Thorne can be found here https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.61.1446

    Alongside that, I share life updates from California and Stanford, what I’m currently working on in gravitational wave research

    @alexthephysicist

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 4 mins
  • Julia Bauman: Inside a Genetics PhD and the Reality of Science TikTok
    Jan 9 2026

    Hi Darling!
    This week I sit down with Julia Bauman, a genetics PhD student at Stanford University. Driven by curiosity about what makes people who they are and a desire to help treat diseases like Alzheimer’s, which has affected her family, Julia began her path on a pre-med track before realising research was where her passion truly lay and choosing a PhD over an MD. Alongside her research Julia makes science publication explainer videos on TikTok, where she has built a following of over 33,000 as a science communicator.

    In this conversation, we talk about her journey from medicine to research, the motivations behind her science communication, and the challenges of balancing content creation with PhD life, as well as her uncertainty around how it might evolve in the future.

    Follow Julia on TikTok: @60_secondscience

    Thanks for listening!
    @alexthephysicist

    Show More Show Less
    54 mins
  • New year, New season!
    Dec 31 2025

    Hi Darling!
    Happy new year!! New year, new season of Alex the Physicist & Friends!
    A new season means a new format and I'm changing up the solo podcast episodes, bringing you more of the chaos, more of the science and just generally more fun. New features include Dr Darlings hotline, weekly updates (in life and in science), Darling's Delight and the Chaos forecast. This week I discuss my 2025 and what I have planned for 2026, power laws (thanks Uri), vacuum bags and NYE plans! Can't wait to take you on this journey with me this year, bring on the chaos.

    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • The Quantum Shaman: do quantum crystals and chat GPT have consciousness?
    Oct 23 2025

    Hi Darling!
    This week I sit down with Dr Aaron Breidenbach, a Stanford physicist, Nature-published scientist, and self-proclaimed Quantum Shaman. Aaron’s research into exotic magnetic crystals could hold the key to the next generation of quantum computers, but his curiosity doesn’t stop there.
    These crystals aren’t just lab-grown, amazingly, they occur naturally in the Atacama Desert, one of the most remote and mysterious places on Earth. The indigenous Atacameño people, whose traditions are deeply animistic, believe everything is conscious... even the mountains themselves. Aaron is heading there to see if these two worlds can meet: could the physics of his crystals and the spirituality of the desert reveal a shared understanding of consciousness?

    We talk about quantum computers, consciousness, AI, and whether matter itself might be aware. Aaron shares why he thinks a computer made from his crystals could one day be conscious and how he plans to use psychedelics and indigenous wisdom to understand what physics alone can’t explain.

    If you’ve ever wondered where science ends and spirituality begins, this one’s for you.

    You can follow Aarons jouney here: thequantumshaman.wordpress.com

    This is the final episode in series 1 of Alex the Physicist & friends, I'll be back with more in a few weeks time!

    @alexthephysicist

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 1 min
  • What I lost & what I found when I moved across the world
    Oct 13 2025

    Hi Darling!
    After two international moves, from the UK to Amsterdam and more recently to California, I've learnt a thing or two about the process. There are inevitable losses and incredibly tough moments but there is also exciting new places and brilliant new friends. In this episode, I share the raw side of moving countries: the loneliness, the heartbreak, and the growth that comes after everything falls apart.

    @alexthephysicist

    Show More Show Less
    16 mins