I fed NotebookLM a 218-page research paper on string theory and the podcast results were mind-blowing

My latest NotebookLM podcast creation is deeper and more fascinating than anything I’ve ever created, and I bet it’ll shock you, too.
I don’t understand string theory. In fact, I bet there’s fewer than 1% of the world that can speak cogently on the subject, but I am fascinated by the concept and have read a bit on it. Not enough to understand or explain it to you, but enough to have a steady and abiding curiosity.
AI, on the other hand, I think I understand and now regularly use as a tool. When Google released a recent NotebookLM update that includes, among other things, mind maps, I thought it was time to bring together something at the very outer edges of my understanding and this bleeding-edge artificial intelligence capability.
So I created a String Theory Podcast.
First, a tiny primer on NotebookLM. It is a powerful AI-based research tool in which you can upload sources, and it will turn them into summaries and extrapolated information in the form of text, podcasts, and visual guides like mind maps.
For me, the most fascinating bit has been the podcasts or “Audio Overviews”, which churn out chatty audio conversations about virtually any topic you feed into them. I call it a podcast because the audio style walks a well-worn path of most popular podcast series. It’s conversational, usually between two people, sometimes funny, and always accessible.
I’ve been wondering, though, if you can stretch the limits of the format with a topic so deep and, honestly, confusing, that the resulting podcast would be conversational nonsense.
Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.
My experiment, however, proved that while the current version of NotebookLM has its limits, it’s far better at comprehending dense science bits than me and probably most people you or I know.
Weird science
Once I decided I wanted NotebookLM to help me with the topic, I went in search of string theory content (there’s a lot more of it online than you might think), quickly stumbling on this 218-page research paper from 2009 by University of Cambridge researcher Dr. David Tong.
I scanned the doc and could tell that it was rich with string theory detail, and so far over my head, it probably resides somewhere near the rings of Saturn.
Imagine trying to read this document and make sense of it. Maybe if someone explained it to me, I’d understand. Maybe.
I downloaded the PDF and then fed it into NotebookLM, where I requested a podcast and a mind map.
It took almost 30 minutes for NotebookLM to create the podcast, and I must admit, I was a little anxious as I opened it. What if this mass of detail on one of physics’ most confounding topics overwhelmed Google’s AI? Might the hosts just be babbling incoherently?
I shouldn’t have worried.
I’d heard these podcast hosts before: a somewhat vanilla pair (a man and a woman) who banter casually, while making witty asides. In this case, they were trying to explain string theory to the uninitiated.
They started by talking about how they’d walk through the topic, covering bits like general relativity, quantum mechanics, and how, at least as of 2009, we had never directly observed these “strings”. Earlier this month, some physicists claimed that they had, in fact, found the “first observational evidence supporting string theory.” But I digress.
The hosts spoke like physics experts, but, where possible, in layman’s terms. I quickly found myself wishing they had a guest. The podcast would’ve worked better if they were proxies for me, not understanding much at all, and had an AI-generated expert to interview.
Stringing it all together
As the podcast progressed, the hosts dug into the details of string theory, specifically, the definition of a “string.” They described them as tiny objects that vibrate and added, “all stuff in the universe comes from how tiny strings are vibrating.”
Things got more complex from there, and while the AI podcast hosts’ tone never changed, I struggled to follow along. I still can’t tell you what “relativistic point particle viewed through Einstein’s special relativity” really means. Though I did appreciate the analogy of “imagine a string moving through space time.”
The AI hosts used various tricks to keep me engaged and not completely confused. The male host would, like a podcast parrot, often repeat a bit of what the female host had just explained, and use some decent analogies to try to make it relatable.
At times, the female host lapsed into what sounded like she was reading straight out of the research paper, but the male host was always there to pull her back to entertainment mode. He did a lot of chatty summarizing.
I felt like I reconnected to the whole thing when they explained how “string morphed into the theory of everything” and added, “bosons and fermions, partners in crime due to supersymmetry.”
This was heavy
After 25 minutes of this, my head was stuffed to the point of bursting with those still-theoretical strings and spinning with terms such as “vertex operators” and “holomorphic.”
I hoped for a grand and glorious summary at the end, but the podcast abruptly ended at almost 31 minutes. It cut off as if the hosts ran out of stream, ideas, or information, and walked away from the mics in frustration and without signing off.
In some ways, it feels like this is my fault. After all, I forced these SIMs to learn all this stuff and then explain it to me, because I could never do it. Maybe they got fed up.
I also checked out the mind maps, which are branching diagrams that can help you map out and represent complex topics like string theory. As you can imagine, the mind maps for this topic start simple but get increasingly complex as you expand each branch. Still, they’re a nice study companion to the podcast.
It’s also worth noting that I could enrich the podcast and mind maps with other research sources. I would simply add them into the sources panel in NotebookLM and rerun the “audio overview”.
A real expert weighs in
For as much as I learned and as much as I trust the source material, I wondered about the podcast’s accuracy. AI, even with solid information, can hallucinate, or at least misinterpret. I tried contacting the paper’s author, Dr. Tong, but never heard back. So, I turned to another physics expert, Michael Lubell, Professor of Physics at City College of CUNY.
Dr. Lubell agreed to listen to the podcast and give me some feedback. A week later, he emailed me this brief note, “Just listened to the string theory podcast. Interestingly presented, but it requires a reasonable amount of expertise to follow it.”
When I asked about any obvious errors, Lubell wrote, “Nothing obvious, but I’ve never done string theory research.” Fair enough, but I’m willing to bet Lubell understands and knows more about string theory than I do.
Perhaps, the AI podcasters now know more about the subject than either of us.
You might also like
My latest NotebookLM podcast creation is deeper and more fascinating than anything I’ve ever created, and I bet it’ll shock you, too. I don’t understand string theory. In fact, I bet there’s fewer than 1% of the world that can speak cogently on the subject, but I am fascinated by…
Recent Posts
- Donald Trump’s crusade against offshore wind just got more serious
- I fed NotebookLM a 218-page research paper on string theory and the podcast results were mind-blowing
- Facebook considered offering an ad-free subscription after the Cambridge Analytica scandal
- What Strava buying Runna means for users of both fitness apps – according to their CEOs
- Mario Kart World for Switch 2 borrows Forza’s rewind feature
Archives
- April 2025
- March 2025
- February 2025
- January 2025
- December 2024
- November 2024
- October 2024
- September 2024
- August 2024
- July 2024
- June 2024
- May 2024
- April 2024
- March 2024
- February 2024
- January 2024
- December 2023
- November 2023
- October 2023
- September 2023
- August 2023
- July 2023
- June 2023
- May 2023
- April 2023
- March 2023
- February 2023
- January 2023
- December 2022
- November 2022
- October 2022
- September 2022
- August 2022
- July 2022
- June 2022
- May 2022
- April 2022
- March 2022
- February 2022
- January 2022
- December 2021
- November 2021
- October 2021
- September 2021
- August 2021
- July 2021
- June 2021
- May 2021
- April 2021
- March 2021
- February 2021
- January 2021
- December 2020
- November 2020
- October 2020
- September 2020
- August 2020
- July 2020
- June 2020
- May 2020
- April 2020
- March 2020
- February 2020
- January 2020
- December 2019
- November 2019
- September 2018
- October 2017
- December 2011
- August 2010