In this episode of the Crazy Wisdom podcast, host Stewart Alsop talks with Umair Siddiqui about a wide range of interconnected topics spanning plasma physics, aerospace engineering, fusion research, and the philosophy of building complex systems, drawing on Umair’s path from hands-on plasma experiments and nonlinear physics to founding and scaling RF plasma thrusters for small satellites at Phase Four; along the way they discuss how plasmas behave at material boundaries, why theory often breaks in real-world systems, how autonomous spacecraft propulsion actually works, what space radiation does to electronics and biology, the practical limits and promise of AI in scientific discovery, and why starting with simple, analog approaches before adding automation is critical in both research and manufacturing, grounding big ideas in concrete engineering experience. You can find Umair on
Linkedin.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversationTimestamps
00:00 Opening context and
plasma rockets, early interests in
space, cars, airplanes 05:00 Academic path into
space plasmas,
mechanical engineering, and hands-on experiments
10:00 Grad school focus on
plasma physics,
RF helicon sources, and nonlinear theory limits
15:00 Bridging
fusion research and
space propulsion, Department of Energy funding context
20:00 Spin-out to
Phase Four, building
CubeSat RF plasma thrusters and real hardware
25:00 Autonomous propulsion systems, embedded controllers, and spacecraft fault handling
30:00 Radiation in space,
single-event upsets, redundancy vs rad-hard electronics
35:00 Analog-first philosophy,
mechanical thinking, and resisting premature automation
40:00 AI in science, low vs high hanging fruit, automation of experiments and insight
45:00 Manufacturing philosophy, incremental scaling, lessons from
Elon Musk and production
50:00 Science vs engineering,
concentration of effort, power, and progress in discovery
Key Insights