Skip to content
Home » 2025 Physics Nobel Prize Winner John Martinis on All-In Podcast (Transcript)

2025 Physics Nobel Prize Winner John Martinis on All-In Podcast (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of the 2025 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics professor John Martinis’ interview on All-In Podcast with host David Friedberg on “The Quantum Leap That Changed Everything”, October 27, 2025.

Note: The Nobel Prize in Physics 2025 was awarded jointly to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis “for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunnelling and energy quantisation in an electric circuit”.

Welcome and Introduction

DAVID FRIEDBERG: Welcome. Today, I’m very excited for this All-In interview with this week’s Nobel laureate, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2025, John Martinis. John, welcome to the All-In interview.

JOHN MARTINIS: Yeah, thanks for inviting me. I’m quite excited about this talk and love to explain to people about what this prize is all about.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: Well, the Nobel Prize is the most prestigious honor, and particularly in physics, that I think can be awarded. You’re in the record books. It’s going to be an incredible ceremony coming up for you. Maybe we could go back to the beginning in your history. I’d love to hear a little bit about where did you grow up and how did you get started with your interest in physics?

Early Life and Education

JOHN MARTINIS: Well, so I grew up in San Pedro, California, and grew up there my whole time. My father is a fireman and my mom stayed at home, took care of us. Through the years, I was always interested in science, technology.

I’m going to say one of the things is my dad actually didn’t have a high school education, but very smart person. He was always building things in the garage, various projects. So I grew up knowing how to build things, which also tells you how things work. It’s an empirical view, tactical view of how physics works.

So when I took physics in high school, I actually loved it because there was actually some math behind it and concepts, and it really made sense to me. I just really fell in love with the subject and then went to UC Berkeley and did pretty well there and enjoyed it a lot.

And then in my senior year at UC Berkeley, I had a class from John Clark, who was my advisor, and found out what he was doing. He was just starting to look at these quantum mechanics and electrical devices stuff, and it sounded really interesting for me. I guess I could see maybe when something would take off. So I started to do the graduate school work with him.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: You went to Berkeley for graduate school?

JOHN MARTINIS: I went to Berkeley for bachelor school, which you’re not supposed to do.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: I was originally a physics and math undergrad at Cal.

JOHN MARTINIS: Okay.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: I changed my major later and actually got my degree in astrophysics. There was some upper division math class that really turned me off to math as a major. There were just so many proofs, it drove me nuts.

JOHN MARTINIS: Right, right.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: And then physics was always exciting, but I liked working in the astro lab and I worked actually at Lawrence Berkeley Lab.

JOHN MARTINIS: Oh, okay. Yeah.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: But then you stayed at Berkeley and went to grad school, right?

The Question That Changed Everything

JOHN MARTINIS: Yeah, I stayed at Berkeley, went to grad school. We started this project a couple years into grad school. What was interesting is this was a question that was actually posed by Professor Anthony Leggett, who won the Nobel Prize for helium-3 physics in, I think, 2003.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: Was that superfluid?

JOHN MARTINIS: Superfluid, helium-3. Yeah, that’s right.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: So he showed if you put helium-3 cold enough, it almost has this new sort of characteristics with the physics and how it moves and how it works.

JOHN MARTINIS: Well, it has this superfluid behavior, but it has a very complicated behavior because of the more complicated nuclei of the helium-3. And this had been discovered and people worked for a while to figure that out. And he helped develop the theory for that. So he was quite well known, very, very smart person.

And although he won the Nobel Prize for that, there’s not much helium-3 physics going on. But for the question that led to our experiment, there’s a huge field and the question was: do macroscopic objects behave quantum mechanically?

And this is a macroscopic object, might be a small ball. In our case, it’s an electrical circuit with billions of electrons in it, billions of atoms. And is the collective motion of, say, the ball quantum mechanical? Now, if you think about throwing a ball against the wall, it’s going to bounce off. But if you make the wall thin enough and the ball light enough, it’ll then every once in a while tunnel through because of the laws of quantum mechanics.

Understanding Quantum Mechanics

DAVID FRIEDBERG: So hold on, let’s just pause on that for a second. I think that’s really worth spending a moment.

JOHN MARTINIS: Yeah, great.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: So when we talk about quantum mechanics, when we talk about the relative position or energy or movement of a particle at the atomic scale, as small as an atom or smaller than an atom, we have to use probabilities to describe where things are going to be. That was what was really the big understanding of quantum mechanics in the early 20th century, right? Is that there’s…

JOHN MARTINIS: Yeah.

DAVID FRIEDBERG: Probability of things being where they are and moving as they’re moving there. It’s not deterministic, like we can see with the ball that we throw around. When you get very, very small, things get very fuzzy and it’s very hard.

JOHN MARTINIS: So you hit upon the key idea here, maybe by accident, but it’s very important. Quantum mechanics was developed for the theory of small things. Electrons, atoms, things that are the fundamental constituents of it, but very small.

And if you take an atom, it’s made from electron and a nucleus.