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How do engineers solve problems that seem to violate the laws of physics?
In this episode, we speak with Dan Gelbart, a prolific inventor and precision engineer, about what it really means to work at the limits of physical law. From lasers and optical systems to ultra-precision manufacturing and semiconductor tools, Gelbart has spent decades designing systems where nanometers, noise, and nonlinearities matter, and where small misunderstandings of physics can block real progress.
We discuss the story of the first working laser, built by Theodore Maiman, and why it succeeded only after questioning widely accepted assumptions. Gelbart explains how many “impossible” engineering problems aren’t forbidden by physics at all: they’re constrained by measurement errors, incomplete models, or failure to explore edge cases like pulsed operation, material effects, and boundary conditions.
We explore precision metrology, high-resolution imaging for satellite systems, the culture of engineering education, and the difference between a true physical limit and a design constraint. Gelbart reflects on why mastering fundamentals, mechanics, optics, electromagnetism, matters more than chasing trends, and how breakthroughs often come from carefully re-examining what others assume cannot be done.
Whether you’re interested in physics, engineering, semiconductor manufacturing, lasers, or the philosophy of technological innovation, this conversation offers a rigorous look at how engineers operate at the edge of what nature allows, and sometimes push beyond what others think is possible.
Follow us for more technical interviews with the world’s greatest scientists:
Twitter: https://x.com/632nmPodcast
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/632nmpodcast?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw==
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/632nm/about/
Substack: https://632nmpodcast.substack.com/
Follow our hosts!
Mikhail Shalaginov: https://x.com/MYShalaginov
Michael Dubrovsky: https://x.com/MikeDubrovsky
Xinghui Yin: https://x.com/XinghuiYin
Subscribe:
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/632nm/id1751170269
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4aVH9vT5qp5UUUvQ6Uf6OR
Website: [https://www.632nm.com](https://www.632nm.com/)
Timestamps:
00:00 - Intro
01:35 - The World’s First Laser
07:53 - Solving Impossible Problems
23:37 - Underestimated Problems
39:36 - Dan’s Backstory
43:33 - How to Teach Yourself Anything
47:03 - Shortcomings of Modern Education
53:19 - Developing the Optical Tape Recorder
1:01:39 - Machine Obsolescence
1:08:04 - Why are Scientists Often Bad Businessmen?
1:15:17 - Developing Medical Devices
1:24:52 - Untapped Potential of Materials Science
1:30:47 - Accidental Inventions
1:35:37 - Surviving Bureaucracy
1:42:27 - Humanoid Robots
1:44:11 - Managing an Engineering Team
1:50:06 - Developing the First Good Mobile Data Terminal
1:54:15 - Building an Environment for Solving Problems
2:02:18 - Why Aren’t We Inventing New Things?
#machining #cnc #precisionengineering #metrology #machineshop
By Misha Shalaginov, Michael Dubrovsky, Xinghui Yin5
88 ratings
How do engineers solve problems that seem to violate the laws of physics?
In this episode, we speak with Dan Gelbart, a prolific inventor and precision engineer, about what it really means to work at the limits of physical law. From lasers and optical systems to ultra-precision manufacturing and semiconductor tools, Gelbart has spent decades designing systems where nanometers, noise, and nonlinearities matter, and where small misunderstandings of physics can block real progress.
We discuss the story of the first working laser, built by Theodore Maiman, and why it succeeded only after questioning widely accepted assumptions. Gelbart explains how many “impossible” engineering problems aren’t forbidden by physics at all: they’re constrained by measurement errors, incomplete models, or failure to explore edge cases like pulsed operation, material effects, and boundary conditions.
We explore precision metrology, high-resolution imaging for satellite systems, the culture of engineering education, and the difference between a true physical limit and a design constraint. Gelbart reflects on why mastering fundamentals, mechanics, optics, electromagnetism, matters more than chasing trends, and how breakthroughs often come from carefully re-examining what others assume cannot be done.
Whether you’re interested in physics, engineering, semiconductor manufacturing, lasers, or the philosophy of technological innovation, this conversation offers a rigorous look at how engineers operate at the edge of what nature allows, and sometimes push beyond what others think is possible.
Follow us for more technical interviews with the world’s greatest scientists:
Twitter: https://x.com/632nmPodcast
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/632nmpodcast?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igsh=ZDNlZDc0MzIxNw==
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/632nm/about/
Substack: https://632nmpodcast.substack.com/
Follow our hosts!
Mikhail Shalaginov: https://x.com/MYShalaginov
Michael Dubrovsky: https://x.com/MikeDubrovsky
Xinghui Yin: https://x.com/XinghuiYin
Subscribe:
Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/632nm/id1751170269
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4aVH9vT5qp5UUUvQ6Uf6OR
Website: [https://www.632nm.com](https://www.632nm.com/)
Timestamps:
00:00 - Intro
01:35 - The World’s First Laser
07:53 - Solving Impossible Problems
23:37 - Underestimated Problems
39:36 - Dan’s Backstory
43:33 - How to Teach Yourself Anything
47:03 - Shortcomings of Modern Education
53:19 - Developing the Optical Tape Recorder
1:01:39 - Machine Obsolescence
1:08:04 - Why are Scientists Often Bad Businessmen?
1:15:17 - Developing Medical Devices
1:24:52 - Untapped Potential of Materials Science
1:30:47 - Accidental Inventions
1:35:37 - Surviving Bureaucracy
1:42:27 - Humanoid Robots
1:44:11 - Managing an Engineering Team
1:50:06 - Developing the First Good Mobile Data Terminal
1:54:15 - Building an Environment for Solving Problems
2:02:18 - Why Aren’t We Inventing New Things?
#machining #cnc #precisionengineering #metrology #machineshop

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