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  • Building Brains on Chips: Carbon Nanotubes, Lipid Nanoparticles, and Engineering the Frontier of Neurodegeneration | Rebecca Pinals
    2026/05/26

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    What if the most powerful tools for understanding the human brain are the very tiny particles we're learning to build, atom by atom? In this episode of No Reason to Get Excited (NRTGE), Dr. Aaron Winkler sits down with Rebecca Pinals, Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at Stanford University and Institute Scholar at Sarafan ChEM-H, to explore the frontier where nanotechnology, neuroscience, and chemical engineering collide.

    From carbon nanotubes that glow in the near-infrared, to the "protein corona" that makes biological systems so beautifully unpredictable, to lipid nanoparticles that may one day flush the brain clean of disease, Rebecca walks through how her lab is engineering microscopic tools to crack one of medicine's hardest problems: Alzheimer's disease. Along the way, Aaron and Rebecca dig into why almost everything we know about the brain comes from animals that aren't quite us, how a handful of cells can self-assemble into a working capillary inside a hydrogel, and why the long-overlooked story of lipids may be the missing piece in our understanding of neurodegeneration.


    About the Guest
    Rebecca Pinals is an Assistant Professor of Chemical Engineering at Stanford University and an Institute Scholar at Sarafan ChEM-H. The Pinals Lab engineers neuro-models and nano-tools to uncover mechanisms of neurodegenerative disease, with a particular emphasis on the blood–brain barrier, the vascular interface that serves as the molecular gateway into the brain. Rebecca trained as a chemical engineer at Brown University, completed her PhD in Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at UC Berkeley with Professor Markita Landry as an NSF Graduate Research Fellow, and pivoted into neuroscience as a Schmidt Science Fellow during her postdoc at MIT's Picower Institute, working with Professors Li-Huei Tsai and Bob Langer. Her lab combines induced pluripotent stem cell–based 3D brain models with the rational design of nanoparticles to study, intervene in, and ultimately treat diseases like Alzheimer's.

    Connect with Rebecca
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rebeccapinals/


    Chapters

    00:00 – Cold Open: A Chemical Engineer at the Edge of Neuroscience

    00:32 – Meet Rebecca Pinals

    01:20 – From Conventional Catalysis to a Love of the Nanoscale

    03:42 – Carbon Nanotubes That Glow in the Near-Infrared

    09:55 – The Protein Corona Problem

    12:30 – Lipid Nanoparticles, mRNA Vaccines, and a COVID Pivot

    14:18 – Why Alzheimer's: The Forgotten Lipid Story

    18:34 – APOE, Astrocytes, and Lipoproteins as Therapeutics

    24:15 – Why We Need a Human Blood-Brain Barrier Model

    33:35 – Endothelial Cells, Pericytes, and the Real Anatomy of the BBB

    42:48 – When Cells Find Each Other: Self-Assembly Into Capillaries

    50:51 – Microplastics, Prions, and What We Don't Know We're Doing

    54:17 – The Moments a Scientist Lives For

    57:40 – Becoming a PI: From the Bench to Big Science

    If you enjoyed this episode of No Reason to Get Excited, make sure to follow the show, leave a rating or review, and share this episode with someone who loves deep conversations about science, physics, and the mysteries of the universe.

    Connect with Dr. Aaron Winkler

    • Website: www.aaronwinklermd.com
    • LinkedIn: @NRTGEPOD
    • Instagram @NRTGEPOD
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    1 時間 12 分
  • Life at the Edge of Equilibrium: Non-Equilibrium Physics, Machine Learning, and the Molecular Machinery of Life | Grant Rotskoff
    2026/05/19

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    What if the secret to understanding life lies in the mathematics of systems that can never sit still? In this episode of No Reason to Get Excited (NRTGE), Dr. Aaron Winkler sits down with Grant Rotskoff, Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University, to explore the breathtaking frontier where statistical physics, computation, and biology collide.

    From the unsolved mystery of how ATP, the "spark of life," actually hydrolyzes, to the way muscle tissue self-assembles from molecular ratchets, Grant unpacks what it means to study living systems that are, by their very nature, perpetually far from equilibrium. Along the way, Aaron draws striking parallels between the molecular machinery of cells and the deepest questions of consciousness, attention, and emergence.

    About the Guest

    Grant Rotskoff is an Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Stanford University. His research sits at the intersection of theoretical chemistry, statistical physics, and machine learning, with a focus on understanding the non-equilibrium dynamics of biological systems. He trained as a mathematician at the University of Chicago before turning to biophysics, and his lab uses cutting-edge computational methods, including machine-learned interatomic potentials and importance sampling, to study problems ranging from ATP hydrolysis to the self-assembly of muscle tissue.

    Connect with Grant

    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/grant-rotskoff-47427a31b

    Chapters

    00:00 – Why Great Research Questions Live in the Gaps
    01:07 – Meet Grant Rotskoff
    01:49 – What It Means for Life to Be Far From Equilibrium
    08:17 – Why Biology Is Too Complex to Brute-Force
    18:01 – How Machine Learning Is Changing Molecular Simulation
    28:02 – ATP Hydrolysis: The Spark of Life
    35:40 – ATP Synthase, Kinases, and Molecular Motors
    38:20 – Why Biology Works Like a Ratchet at the Nanoscale
    42:06 – How Organisation Emerges From Energy
    55:32 – Muscle Tissue, Sarcomeres, and Self-Assembly
    56:49 – The Mathematics of Emergence
    01:08:33 – Use the Tools You Have

    If you enjoyed this episode of No Reason to Get Excited, make sure to follow the show, leave a rating or review, and share this episode with someone who loves deep conversations about science, physics, and the mysteries of the universe.

    Connect with Dr. Aaron Winkler

    • Website: www.aaronwinklermd.com
    • LinkedIn: @NRTGEPOD
    • Instagram @NRTGEPOD
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    1 時間 10 分
  • The Price of Power: Campaign Finance, Press Coverage, and the Polarization of American Politics | Andrew Myers
    2026/05/15

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    What happens when you apply machine learning and rigorous data analysis to the "Wild West" of American campaign finance? In this episode of No Reason to Get Excited (NRTGE), Dr. Aaron Winkler sits down with Andrew Myers, a PhD candidate at Stanford University and incoming Assistant Professor at MIT, to pull back the curtain on how money, media, and institutional rules shape our democracy.

    From the surprising ways donors "punish" extremist candidates to the hidden consequences of term limits, Andrew shares insights from his dissertation that challenge standard political assumptions. Along the way, Aaron draws fascinating parallels between the circulatory system of the human body and the systematic flow of modern civilization.

    About the Guest

    Andrew Myers is a political scientist and PhD candidate at Stanford University specializing in American politics and political methodology. His research focuses on polarization in legislatures, campaign finance, and election administration. After completing a fellowship at the Hoover Institution, he will join the faculty at MIT as an Assistant Professor.

    Connect with Andrew

    Website: www.andrewcwmyers.com


    Chapters

    00:00 – The "Block Power" of Parliamentary Systems
    02:00 – Meet Andrew Myers: From Stanford to MIT
    04:00 – The Role of Money: Analyzing Citizens United and Direct Contributions
    07:20 – Machine Learning in Politics: Mapping Contributions to Voting Records
    12:20 – Why "Coin Flip" Elections are a Social Scientist's Dream
    15:15 – Aaron’s Lessons from the Obama 2004 Senate Campaign
    22:10 – The "Uncontested" Victory: How Obama Won His First Election
    33:00 – The Press Coverage Problem: Why Down-Ballot Races Suffer in the Dark
    40:00 – Conclusion #1: Do Donors Punish Extremists?
    41:30 – Conclusion #2: How Strengthening Local Press Moderates Legislatures
    48:00 – Access-Seeking vs. Ideological Donors
    53:00 – "Why Is There So Little Money in Politics?"
    58:00 – The Chipping Away of Campaign Finance Reform
    1:01:00 – The Lack of Competition in State Legislatures
    1:06:00 – The Dark Side of Term Limits: Why They May Actually Increase Polarization
    1:09:00 – Redistricting and Strategic Residing
    1:31:00 – "Dialing for Dollars": The Fundraising Quotas of New Representatives
    1:38:00 – The Body Politic: O’Hare Airport as a Heart and the ATP Synthase of Cities
    1:46:00 – Blood Pressure and Political Compromise: The Kidney-Lung Connection

    If you enjoyed this episode of No Reason to Get Excited, make sure to follow the show, leave a rating or review, and share this episode with someone who loves deep conversations about science, physics, and the mysteries of the universe.

    Connect with Dr. Aaron Winkler

    • Website: www.aaronwinklermd.com
    • LinkedIn: @NRTGEPOD
    • Instagram @NRTGEPOD
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    1 時間 53 分
  • Can We Actually Detect Gravitational Waves with Atoms? | Peter Graham
    2026/05/12

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    What happens when a psychiatrist sits down with a Stanford physics professor to talk about gravitational waves, dark matter, quantum mechanics, and atoms existing in two places at once?

    In this episode of No Reason to Get Excited (NRTGE), Dr. Aaron Winkler talks with Stanford Physicist Peter Graham about the strange and fascinating world of modern physics. What starts as a conversation about gravitational wave detection quickly turns into a deep exploration of quantum mechanics, atom interferometry, atomic clocks, dark matter, and the bizarre reality of particles behaving like waves.

    Peter explains how researchers are building tabletop experiments capable of measuring incredibly small distortions in space-time, why gravity is surprisingly weak compared to electromagnetism, and how a single atom can exist in two places at once. Along the way, Aaron asks the kinds of questions many listeners are probably thinking themselves, leading to a conversation that feels less like a formal interview and more like two curious minds trying to make sense of the universe together.

    This episode is not a simplified science lecture. It’s an intellectually alive conversation about uncertainty, experimentation, physics, and the limits of human intuition.


    About the Guest

    Peter Graham is a professor of physics at Stanford University whose research focuses on fundamental physics, dark matter, gravitational waves, and precision measurement techniques using atomic systems. His work often bridges theoretical physics and experimental collaboration, helping develop new ways to probe some of the deepest unanswered questions in modern science.

    Connect with Peter:

    Website: https://physics.stanford.edu/people/peter-graham

    Chapters

    00:00 – Introduction to Peter Graham and Stanford Physics
    03:20 – Why Collaboration Matters in Modern Physics
    05:10 – The Problem with Dark Matter and Fundamental Physics
    06:00 – Building New Experiments Instead of Bigger Colliders
    07:00 – How LIGO Detects Gravitational Waves
    09:30 – Why Gravity Is Surprisingly Weak
    11:20 – Gravitons, Dark Matter, and Unanswered Questions
    15:15 – Atom Interferometry Explained
    18:00 – Quantum Mechanics and Probability Waves
    24:40 – Using Lasers to Manipulate Atoms
    29:20 – The History of Particle Physics and Scientific Discovery
    33:00 – What Quantum Waves Actually Mean
    41:00 – Vacuum Chambers, Cooling Atoms, and Laser Physics
    47:00 – How Laser Cooling Works
    55:00 – Creating an Atomic Interferometer
    1:00:30 – Measuring Time with Atomic Clocks
    1:08:00 – Using Atoms to Detect Gravitational Waves
    1:15:00 – Earth’s Gravity, Potential Energy, and Quantum States
    1:20:00 – Why Vertical Mine Shafts Matter
    1:24:00 – Measuring Acceleration with Atomic Systems
    1:28:00 – Building the Future of Gravitational Wave Detection

    If you enjoyed this episode of No Reason to Get Excited, make sure to follow the show, leave a rating or review, and share this episode with someone who loves deep conversations about science, physics, and the mysteries of the universe.

    Connect with Dr. Aaron Winkler

    • Website: www.aaronwinklermd.com
    • LinkedIn: @NRTGEPOD
    • Instagram @NRTGEPOD
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    1 時間 30 分
  • The Chemistry of Creativity, Light, and High-Energy Molecules | Noah Burns
    2026/05/12

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    What does it actually mean to create a molecule that has never existed before?

    In this episode of No Reason to Get Excited (NRTGE), Dr. Aaron Winkler sits down with Stanford organic chemist Noah Burns for a wide-ranging conversation about chemistry, creativity, photochemistry, molecular design, and the strange beauty hidden inside organic reactions.

    What begins as a discussion about bromination and halogenation quickly expands into something much bigger: the relationship between science and imagination, the role of intuition in research, and how chemists develop entirely new reaction pathways capable of creating highly strained molecular structures.

    Noah explains how his lab designs reactions that selectively create one molecular “handedness” over another, why chirality matters in medicine and biology, and how light can be used to drive reactions that would otherwise be energetically impossible. Along the way, Aaron connects chemistry to psychology, creativity, consciousness, traffic systems, human relationships, and even the metaphorical power of molecules like porphyrin.

    This is not a technical lecture disguised as a podcast. It’s an intellectually playful conversation about discovery, emergence, energy, and the deeply human side of scientific work.

    About the Guest
    Noah Burns is an associate professor of chemistry at Stanford University specializing in synthetic organic chemistry. His research focuses on developing new chemical reactions, photochemistry, halogenation strategies, strained molecular systems, and the total synthesis of complex natural products. His lab explores how novel molecular transformations can enable discoveries in biology, medicine, and materials science.

    Connect with Noah

    Website: https://chemistry.stanford.edu/people/noah-burns

    Chapters

    00:00 – Introduction to Noah Burns and Organic Chemistry
    01:20 – Columbia, New York City, and Academic Training
    03:00 – Teaching, Curiosity, and Scientific Enthusiasm
    04:30 – What Synthetic Organic Chemists Actually Do
    06:00 – Primary vs. Secondary Metabolites
    08:30 – Natural Products and Drug Discovery
    10:00 – Halogenation, Bromination, and Chemical Reactivity
    12:30 – Why Bromine Is Both Beautiful and Dangerous
    14:00 – Chirality and Why Molecular Handedness Matters
    16:00 – Enantioselective Catalysis Explained
    18:30 – Nobel Prize-Winning Chemistry and Selective Reactions
    21:00 – Designing New Reaction Pathways
    24:00 – Titanium Catalysts and Chiral Ligands
    28:00 – The Creativity and Trial-and-Error of Organic Chemistry
    32:30 – Building Four-Membered Carbon Rings
    34:30 – Using Light and Copper to Create Cyclobutanes
    38:00 – Photochemistry and High-Energy Molecular States
    40:00 – Porphyrins, Photosynthesis, and Human Systems
    44:30 – Redox Reactions and the “Vital Spark” of Life
    46:00 – Why Life Is Controlled Oxidation
    48:00 – Evolution, Energy, and Reactive Systems
    51:00 – Translating Ideas Into Physical Reality
    54:00 – Traffic Theory, Systems Thinking, and Flow States
    57:00 – DARPA, High-Energy Molecules, and Closing Thoughts

    If you enjoyed this episode of No Reason to Get Excited, make sure to follow the show, leave a rating or review, and share this episode with someone who loves deep conversations about science, physics, and the mysteries of the universe.

    Connect with Dr. Aaron Winkler

    • Website: www.aaronwinklermd.com
    • LinkedIn: @NRTGEPOD
    • Instagram @NRTGEPOD
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    58 分