• millie@beehaw.org
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    6 months ago

    The laws of quantum mechanics are confusing, predicting that particles are also waves and that cats are simultaneously alive and dead.

    Okay, so, like, that’s punchier writing than the actual truth, but how am I supposed to buy anything else about physics in the article after that? The level of oversimplification of relatively commonly known concepts does not give me confidence that the rest won’t be pop sci drivel.

    • Gamma@beehaw.org
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      6 months ago

      Luckily you can check out the author’s bio right from the article:

      Dr. Don Lincoln is a Senior Scientist at Fermilab, America’s leading particle physics laboratory, who has coauthored over 1,500 scientific papers. He was a member of the teams that discovered the top quark in 1995 and the Higgs boson in 2012.

      • loops@beehaw.org
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        6 months ago

        The foam is actually an accumulation of retired eldritch horror dandruff.

      • millie@beehaw.org
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        6 months ago

        Straight iced espresso for me. It does make me think of those particular customers who’d always demand an impossible level of no foam, though.

        I did also end up reading about quantum foam anyway. 😂

      • millie@beehaw.org
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        6 months ago

        I mean, they’re both at least illustrative I guess. In the case of particles and waves I may be quibbling a bit over the distinction that something is a particle or a wave versus exhibiting the properties of one or the other.

        In the case of Schrodinger’s cat, the thought experiment suggests that if the life or death of the cat is tied to the collapse of the state vector, an eigenstate of the two implies simultaneous life and death. But the varying interpretations of this problem aren’t so straightforward as ‘both dead and alive’, and it’s kind of misleading to just leave it at that.

        Personally, I find it odd that they’d discount the cat’s own awareness of the state vector’s collapse. Obviously when the atom decays and kills it, it’s going to know before you are regardless of the presence of cardboard.

        It just seems like a lot of kind of imprecise throw-away mentions of more complex ideas for one sentence. But again, maybe I’m being cynical.

        • burgersc12@mander.xyz
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          6 months ago

          I don’t think he was planning to explain these concepts, just hint at them to the layman reading thr article who probably barely know what Schodinger’s cat is.

        • astrsk@kbin.social
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          6 months ago

          Shrodinger’s cat wasn’t some simplified lesson for the layman. It wasn’t even an explanation. It was a commentary about the quantum model itself and how the current state of the model is laughably incomplete and unable to adequately answer or predict anything of value (yet). It wasn’t until more recently that some Newtonian physics might be explainable as emergent properties of quantum mechanics, but we are still a long ways away from a unified or blurred model.

          https://betterexplained.com/articles/gotcha-shrodingers-cat/