Happy Independence Day & de Broglie’s birthday

Happy Independence Day to my fellow Indians !

15th Aug also happens to be birthday of Louis de Broglie, the famous French physicist who played a critical role in understanding wave-particle duality in quantum physics, and laid an important foundation through his formula

λ = h / p ;

where, λ is the wavelength of quantum particle with momentum p and h is the Planck constant.

See here for more details.

de Broglie studied and discovered the wave nature of electron, for which he received the Nobel prize in physics in the year 1929. In 1920s, understanding light from a quantum mechanical viewpoint was a challenge. Reconciling light, both as a particle and a wave, was counterintuitive and required a leap of thought that was provided by de Broglie. On 12th Dec 1928, delivered his Nobel lecture and mentions:

“I thus arrived at the following overall concept which guided my studies:
for both matter and radiations, light in particular, it is necessary to introduce
the corpuscle concept and the wave concept at the same time. In other words
the existence of corpuscles accompanied by waves has to be assumed in all
cases. However, since corpuscles and waves cannot be independent because,
according to Bohr’s expression, they constitute two complementary forces
of reality, it must be possible to establish a certain parallelism between the
motion of a corpuscle and the propagation of the associated wave.

This duality still remains, as we try understand the nature of light and harness it for information processing.

Interestingly, de Broglie was one of persons who nominated CV Raman for the Nobel prize in 1930 ! Below snapshot is from the Nobel prize nomination archives.

Conversation with Kollegala Sharma

Welcome to the podcast Pratidhavani – Humanizing Science

Kollegala Sharma is a renowned science communicator and prolific Kannada writer, celebrated for making science accessible through articles, books, radio dramas, podcasts, and translations. A former chief scientist at CSIR-CFTRI Mysore, he has received prestigious awards for his exceptional contributions, including pioneering India’s first Kannada science podcast and editing the state’s popular science magazine, Kutuhali.

In this conversation (in English), we discuss what motivates him to do what he does so well…communicate science…

Spotify link

References:

Akka TV, dir. 2022. Lecture 107 | Science Journalism : Introduction | Shri. Kollegala Sharma. 44:38. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=031_4I0W9I8.

“Amazon.In.” n.d. Accessed August 6, 2025. https://www.amazon.in/Books-Kollegala-Sharma%60/s?rh=n%3A976389031%2Cp_27%3AKollegala%2BSharma%2560.

“CFTRI.” n.d. Accessed August 8, 2025. https://cftri.res.in/faculty_detail/2062.

Falling Walls Foundation, dir. 2020. Breaking the Wall to Language, Geography and Social Separation. 05:12. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_nscnJFd–8.

Kollegala Sharma | Mysuru Literature Festival. n.d. Accessed August 6, 2025. https://www.mysuruliteraturefestival.com/lit-fest-2024/kollegala-sharma/.

Mandram, dir. 2018. Science and Language – Dr Kollegala Sharma. 27:49. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSqO-AOu9io.

Spotify. n.d. “Learn and Unlearn.” Accessed August 6, 2025. https://open.spotify.com/show/1JYHPAvzx3RuWcO8hL6Cjy.

X (Formerly Twitter). 2025. “(4) Kollegala Sharma (@kollegala) / X.” July 27. https://x.com/kollegala.

YouTube. n.d. “Kollegala Sharma.” Accessed August 6, 2025. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCtB6my4ohaYOnQvBRnPEuA.

Conversation with Shivprasad Patil

Welcome to the podcast Pratidhavani – Humanizing Science

Shivprasad Patil is a Professor in the Department of Physics at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research (IISER) Pune.

His main academic interests include nanotechnology, atomic force microscopy, and single-molecular interactions. His research centers on experimental nanomechanics and force spectroscopy, especially for probing phenomena at the single-molecule level.

In this conversation, we explore his intellectual journey from a small village in Maharashtra to a professor at IISER Pune

Spotify

References:

Force Spectroscopy Conference. n.d. “Conference on Force Spectroscopy and Microscopy, India.” Accessed July 25, 2025. https://forcespectroscopy.in/.

My Site. n.d. “Home.” Accessed July 25, 2025. https://nmlab220.wixsite.com/my-site-1.

“‪Shivprasad Patil‬ – ‪Google Scholar‬.” n.d. Accessed July 25, 2025. https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=rtuNcawAAAAJ&hl=en.

“Shivprasad Patil – IISER Pune.” n.d. Accessed July 25, 2025. https://www.iiserpune.ac.in/research/department/physics/people/faculty/regular-faculty/shivprasad-patil/313.

Sanskrit subhashita – don’t waste

Here is a Sanskrit subhashita that I like.

वृथा वृष्टि: समुद्रेषु वृथा तृप्तेषु भोजनम्।

वृथा दानम् धनाढ्येषु वृथा दीपो दिवाऽपि च॥

LLMs are getting better at translations.

Below is a comparison of translations on 2 platforms

English Translation from perplexity AI:

Rain over the ocean is wasted, food for those who are already full is wasted; Charity to the wealthy is wasted, and a lamp during the daytime is wasted.

English translation from ChatGPT:

Rain over the ocean is in vain, food for one who is already full is in vain; Charity to the wealthy is in vain, and a lamp during the day is also in vain.

ChatGPT – an experiment

Below is a small experiment with ChatGPT (GPT-4o, which is OpenAI’s most advanced model as of July 2025).

I asked for thoughts (from authentic sources) from Indian writers on the nature of the writing process (handwriting vs typewriting).

It confidently gave me quotations from Rabindranath Tagore, R.K. Narayan and U.R. Ananthmurthy. I was intrigued, and below is my conversation:

me: list the quotes from Indian writers above and give the exact sources

Chatgpt: I couldn’t find reputable sources for the exact quotes I previously suggested by Indian writers—so it’s safer to reconsider them.

This is something I have been observing with LLM chatboxes, especially when it comes to the sources that may not be mainstream. One may even say it is hallucinating, but after enquiring further, it said:

The quotes I initially provided appear to be popular paraphrases or second-hand interpretations, but none could be verified in primary texts or reliable interviews.

Then, it asked me if I wanted to use authentic sources to be presented to corroborate the initially mentioned sources. I said yes, and below was its reply:

Here are verified quotes from Rabindranath Tagore, with clear attributions to reliable sources—unfortunately, I couldn’t locate authenticated quotes for other Indian writers on writing methods

The quotes that it gave were peripheral to my initial question. It identified two to three quotations, but none of them were directly connected to my initial query.

There may be at least 2 hypotheses that I can draw from this, which need further testing:

  1. ChatGPT and its kind may be getting trained more intensely on sources that are mainly anglophonic, and its geographical distribution of sources may be skewed. Online literary sources from countries such as India may not be as dense as, say USA, the UK or even some European countries. Will depositing more authentic sources online, including their translations, help the authentic discovery of information from countries such as India?
  2. With the current developments and model training, there may already be a bias in the answers that LLM chatbots give. It may reinforce many viewpoints from Western repositories that may sometimes be disconnected or irrelevant to the user outside Western geographies. In that sense, new information is being built on old information. Are we entering a stage where data deposition asymmetry is creating an asymmetry of discovery?

I know these questions are not trivial to answer, but for LLM chatboxes to be authentic, they need to address questions with proper citations. I know some of them are trying to do that (eg, perplexity AI), but I find the links it provides for certain focused questions are not up to the mark.

My inference:

  1. I am cautiously optimistic about the developments and achievements in source-based LLM interfaces, especially when you feed an authentic source (eg, NotebookLM).
  2. But LLM chatboxes may be hyped when:
    • It comes to its capability of sourcing authentic information, and
    • The immediacy of replacements of existing knowledge systems.
  3. LLM chatboxes should be treated as an experimental tool for utilitarian tasks where the information can be verified independently.
  4. It is important to take the bottom line of ChatGPT seriously: ‘ChatGPT can make mistakes. Check important info.

Conversation with Vipul Dutta

Dr. Vipul Dutta is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences at IIT Guwahati. He holds a PhD from King’s College London, specializing in diplomatic and economic history. His research interests include South Asian diplomatic and military history as well as Indian business history. His monograph, Making Officers out of Gentlemen (2021), explores the development of military institutions in colonial and post-colonial India. At IIT Guwahati, he teaches modern Indian history and business history, including the NPTEL course Indian Business History. His teaching approach is interdisciplinary, drawing on case studies to connect historical themes with contemporary issues.

In this episode, we explore his intellectual journey so far.

Spotify link

References:

“Vipul Dutta | Department of Humanities and Social Sciences :: Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati.” n.d. Accessed June 23, 2025. https://www.iitg.ac.in/hss/faculty_page_profile.php?name=RWRObkhUNVJURk9rVEt0dWpvbEhTUT09.

Dutta, Dr Vipul. 2021. MAKING OFFICERS OUT OF GENTLEMEN. New Delhi: OUP India. Link

“Indian Business History – Course.” n.d. Accessed June 23, 2025. https://onlinecourses.nptel.ac.in/noc20_hs38/preview.

“Vipul Dutta – History Literature Festival.” 2024. January 22, 2024. https://historylitfest.com/Speakers/vipul-dutta/.

History Lit Fest, dir. 2024. Day 3: History Lit Festival 2024. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=btxTSsK5Nxc.

Conversation with Shubashree Desikan

In this episode, we discuss Shubashree’s journey from earning a PhD in physics to building a career in science journalism. She talks about her experiences writing for The Hindu and her current role as Associate Editor at IIT Madras’ Shaastra magazine. As a national award-winning journalist, Shubashree shares insights into making scientific ideas accessible to a wider audience, the challenges she has faced in the field, and her advice for aspiring science writers. This conversation explores her career transition, the role of science communication, and the importance of clarity in sharing scientific knowledge.

REFERENCES:

“Star Stories | Science Is Perspective.” n.d. Accessed June 24, 2025. https://shubadesikan.wordpress.com/.

“(1) Shubashree Desikan | சுபா (@Shubawrite) / X.” 2025. X (Formerly Twitter). April 4, 2025. https://x.com/shubawrite.

“(5) Shubashree Desikan | LinkedIn.” n.d. Accessed June 24, 2025. https://www.linkedin.com/in/shubadesi/?originalSubdomain=in.

Shubashree. 2025. “When Entanglement Reaches for the Stars.” Star Stories (blog). April 3, 2025. https://shubadesikan.wordpress.com/2025/04/03/when-entanglement-reaches-for-the-stars/.

“Shubashree Desikan.” n.d. The Hindu. Accessed June 25, 2025. https://www.thehindu.com/thread/author/Shubashree-Desikan-336/.

ConForce 25 – highlights

From 15th to 18th June 2025, I attended a focused meeting called ConForce.

The location was at an interesting place: Casuarina Resort Park- Kurunji, which is about 70 km from Pune. It was a scenic and raw place, with an amazing landscape. The resort facilities were ok with limited facilities, but the landscape was just breathtaking. It rained almost all the time, but it created a wonderful visual across the horizon with lush green patches of mountains and grey clouds (see image).

The main theme of the meeting was related to force spectroscopy, with a greater tilt towards biophysical applications. I spoke in the optical tweezers section and enjoyed the discussion with various participants and speakers. Specifically, I presented some of our recent, unpublished work on optical binding and its optical perturbation.

YouTube as an Archival Source

There are several models for using YouTube. One of them is to use it as a substitute for television and media outlets. This is where the number of views, subscriptions, and reach becomes important.

Another model is to harness YouTube as an archival source that is open to the public. This is one of the crucial elements of a platform that is easily accessible and, importantly, searchable. Such a platform becomes a repository for many informal academic discussions and interactions.

The archive model is an important category, especially if there is no need to generate revenue from the content deposited on the platform. A crucial aspect is that it can be accessed across the world and, in that sense, represents truly open-access content without paywalls, publication charges or subscriptions. Therefore, I am glad to see that many Indian academic programs, including NPTEL, ICTS, Science Activity Center/Media Center at IISER-Pune and many others are utilizing platforms such as YouTube to post their lectures and talks. Also, many individual academics in India are gradually using YouTube to discuss their work, in the context of research, teaching and entrepreneurship.

This development is slowly turning out to be an invaluable resource that can reach a large audience. Although YouTube is one of the most well-known platforms, many other platforms in the context of social media can also be tapped to spread knowledge. Given their reach and simplicity of use, both for creators and users, these tools become important in a vast country such as India.

As audio-visual public platforms join hands with artificial intelligence tools, they can positively (hopefully) affect how people, especially students, consume educational content. Going forward, I anticipate language translation through direct dubbing to be a game-changer. It could attract many new viewers who have been hesitant to watch technical content simply because it was in a foreign language. Of course, on these platforms, the noise is equally high compared to the signal, and therefore, curating good, targeted resources will be vital. Also, these platforms cannot be treated as a substitute for formal education, but as an extension or complementary source for research and education.

Interesting times ahead.

Conversation with Vijaykumar Krishnamurthy

Vijaykumar Krishnamurthy is a faculty member at ICTS-TIFR, Bengaluru, working at the interface of physics and biology, with a focus on mechanochemical pattern formation in development. He is also the co-creator of Kaapi with Kuriosity, an outreach initiative that fosters public engagement with science through conversations and community events.

In this episode, we explore “physics of life” and his life in physics.

References:

“Vijaykumar Krishnamurthy | ICTS.” n.d. Accessed May 31, 2025. https://www.icts.res.in/people/vijay-krishnamurthy.

International Centre for Theoretical Sciences, dir. 2020. Physics of Life by Vijaykumar Krishnamurthy. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZtWiyZZafM.

“(1) Vijay Krishnamurthy (@Vijay_K_Murthy) / X.” 2025. X (Formerly Twitter). May 22, 2025. https://x.com/vijay_k_murthy.

Sansad TV, dir. 2016. Eureka with C V Vishveshwara. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gw9BQvkafSA.

“Resonance Journal of Science Education | Indian Academy of Sciences.” n.d. Accessed May 31, 2025. https://www.ias.ac.in/describe/article/reso/008/10/0069-0075.

“Kaapi with Kuriosity | ICTS.” n.d. Accessed May 31, 2025. https://www.icts.res.in/outreach/kaapi-with-kuriosity.

“Biological PhysicsPhysics of Living Systems A Decadal Survey | National Academies.” n.d. Accessed May 31, 2025. https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/biological-physicsphysics-of-living-systems-a-decadal-survey.

“The National Academies Press | Physics of Life.” n.d. Accessed May 31, 2025. https://nap.nationalacademies.org/resource/26403/interactive/.

“Biological Physics Comes of Age.” n.d. Accessed May 31, 2025. https://www.aps.org/apsnews/2023/03/biological-physics.