How can two particles (a particle and its antiparticle) communicate instantaneously, no matter how great the distance is between them? According to our current understanding of the laws of our Universe, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light, so when we stimulate one of the particles, why do both respond at the exact same time, no matter how far apart they are? Is information travelling infinitely fast between these two particles, or are they really still the same particle at some fundamental (quantum) level? In 1996, Physicists proved that one 'piece' of matter can be in two places at the same time: http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1571/is_n26_v12/ai_18469259/
The fact that our Universe is comprised of matter of this complexity is absolutely astounding.
Could Quantum Physics represent a process of continuous change that we see and feel as the flow of time itself?
This theory is based on two postulates
1. Is that the quantum wave particle function Ψ represents the forward passage of time ∆E ∆t ≥ h/2π itself
2. Is that Heisenberg’s Uncertainty Principle ∆×∆p×≥h/4π that is formed by the w- function is the same uncertainty we have with any future event that we can interact with turning the possible into the actual!
nickharvey7 3 months ago
It was proven in the 1980s
A physicist shot two electrons out at the same time and recorded the direction they were rotating in. They always seemed to be rotating in the opposite direction of each other no matter what he did which is weird since the direction an electron is spinning is unpredictable and constantly changing
jutomana 3 months ago
What experiment demonstrates this assertion? How do you test that electrons created together and then separated by great distance have this sort of entanglement you claim?
Tsresponds 9 months ago