(November 11, 2018 at 9:29 pm)Everena Wrote:(November 11, 2018 at 8:51 pm)Jörmungandr Wrote: From your own article:
Two particles interacting, not one particle existing two places at once.
They are interacting while they are existing in 2 different places. Please educate yourself about this. I am right and you are wrong. Let it go.
You're even wrong according to your own source. Fine. You want more?
Quote: "No reasonable definition of reality" could permit two objects to be mysteriously entwined across great distances, Einstein and his collaborators complained in Physical Review (SNL: 5/11/35, p. 300). There must be more to reality, Einstein believed, than quantum theory described. But rather than undermining quantum physics, the EPR paper, as it became known, became fodder for other scientists who showed that this unreasonable connection was in fact real. If quantum rules applied in everyday life, as soon as Peyton saw his quantum coin land in Seattle, he would know the outcome of Eli's toss--even if Eli's game were across the country or on the moon.
For decades, though, few physicists worried about entanglement. It was regarded as a hypothetical concept with no real prospects for ever being tested. "Initially it was a pure theory--quasi-philosophy," says physicist Nicolas Gisin of the University of Geneva.
That's no longer the case. Now, laboratories around the world routinely create and study entanglement, pushing the limits on the types and sizes of objects that can be entangled. Some studies are attempting to clarify the mysterious boundary separating the strange realm of quantum weirdness from the macroscopic world of football. Others focus on entanglement itself, particularly how it changes over time. Much of the new work is building a base for powerful technologies that operate in the real world, from manipulating information in futuristic quantum computers to sending secret messages with unbreakable security.
~ Sanders, Laura. "Everyday entanglement: physicists take quantum weirdness out of the lab." Science News, November 20, 2010, 22+.
Two objects. Not one.
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