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Topic: Quantum Entanglement
Rabbit's photo
Thu 02/20/20 05:52 PM
I need someone smart to explain this to me. I know I can look it up but then I can't ask questions, plus I have more fun this way. I understand the basics, I need elaboration.

Bastet127's photo
Thu 02/20/20 06:18 PM
Theoretically, I can’t help you. But, I do believe it is what our
current government is experiencing.

Ɔʎɹɐx's photo
Thu 02/20/20 11:14 PM
Edited by Ɔʎɹɐx on Thu 02/20/20 11:18 PM
It's the Entanglement on the Quantum level

Ladywind7's photo
Fri 02/21/20 12:21 AM
You would probably have more fun googling it...yawn.

SparklingCrystal 💖💎's photo
Fri 02/21/20 02:42 AM
It sounds like a great title for a book or a movie.
As for the rest... I Googled the meaning of "quantum" but as soon as something is about physics I tend to get brain-freeze of the worst kind.
One of the reasons I cannot get through Sacred Geometry.
I'm a smart, intelligent woman, but when it gets to such things... computer says 'no!'

Rabbit's photo
Fri 02/21/20 03:15 AM
I know it's particles that seem to influence each others movement even over vast distances on the quantum level but I was looking for more. I know it confused Einstein and he said it was "spooky", so I guess there is little chance I am going to wrap my head around it. Just asking.

notbeold's photo
Fri 02/21/20 04:12 AM
It's when newbies get enthusiastic and buy a fishing rod, but have never used one before. It can involve other people, fencing rails, power lines, jetty pylons, boats, swimmers, and occasionally fish.

Bastet127's photo
Fri 02/21/20 04:17 AM

It's when newbies get enthusiastic and buy a fishing rod, but have never used one before. It can involve other people, fencing rails, power lines, jetty pylons, boats, swimmers, and occasionally fish.



I know a newbie that caught a seagull. True fly fishing lol.

SparklingCrystal 💖💎's photo
Fri 02/21/20 04:18 AM

I know it's particles that seem to influence each others movement even over vast distances on the quantum level but I was looking for more. I know it confused Einstein and he said it was "spooky", so I guess there is little chance I am going to wrap my head around it. Just asking.

That sounds like the butterfly effect?? Is that similar, or the same?

Ladywind7's photo
Fri 02/21/20 04:57 AM
I think they call it telepathy...

Steve McCollough 's photo
Fri 02/21/20 09:07 AM
:sweat_smile::sweat_smile::sweat_smile:

Rabbit's photo
Fri 02/21/20 01:06 PM
The butterfly effect is when a butterfly flaps it's wings in Japan and causes me to drive off the road and hit a tree here in N.Y. and things like that. I am talking about quantum physics.

SparklingCrystal 💖💎's photo
Fri 02/21/20 02:05 PM

The butterfly effect is when a butterfly flaps it's wings in Japan and causes me to drive off the road and hit a tree here in N.Y. and things like that. I am talking about quantum physics.

I know, and it seemed the same thing as what you said, that's why I asked.
I learnt butterfly is part of chaos theory. I didn't even know that was a real thing, hihi. I only know it from Jurassic Park, Ian Malcolm mentioning it.

cajunman59's photo
Fri 02/21/20 02:55 PM
Try a sight called Gaia.com. Prof Theresa Bullard kinda explains it "relatively" easy.

no photo
Fri 02/21/20 07:38 PM
It's when you eat asparagus and ....oh never mmind

Serious's photo
Fri 02/21/20 10:01 PM
Edited by Serious on Fri 02/21/20 10:03 PM


I know it's particles that seem to influence each others movement even over vast distances on the quantum level but I was looking for more. I know it confused Einstein and he said it was "spooky", so I guess there is little chance I am going to wrap my head around it. Just asking.

That sounds like the butterfly effect?? Is that similar, or the same?

Similar but different.
Butterfly effect like already explained here is a series of chain reactions from the smallest change that can affect larger actions/reactions (like domino or snowball effect). The theory is even if you go back in time to have a do-over and even trying to do and act the same way it would change things up to the point where history would turn out differently then before (there are movies out there about this). Because the slightest change even a second apart from the other timeline before would change things. Example traffic: You leave your house a second earlier and avoid a traffic accident or causes someone else to have one down the line that didn't before even if you never cross path directly..

SparklingCrystal 💖💎's photo
Sat 02/22/20 04:23 AM

Try a sight called Gaia.com. Prof Theresa Bullard kinda explains it "relatively" easy.

I know that site. You have to pay for it, like a subscription. I had a look at it before as it was recommended but it addresses things that either aren't my area of interest or a rather mental/logical approach which doesn't work for me.
I would have liked to check the site to see if there are things maybe that interest me, but if you don't pay you can't see/read.

Ladywind7's photo
Sat 02/22/20 05:53 AM
Lol. Rabbit. Post another thread and don't take my advice about just commenting on other threads. You do my head on, in a good way. Luv ya xxx

no photo
Mon 02/24/20 07:42 AM
i tangle quants.

...quite invigorating. smokin

Tom4Uhere's photo
Mon 02/24/20 12:00 PM
Edited by Tom4Uhere on Mon 02/24/20 12:13 PM
The Butterfly Effect is a simple way to explain Chaos. The chaotic nature of cause and effect.

Quantum Entanglement is a bit difficult unless you read a lot of quantum theory.
Quantum basically means 'extremely small' (below nanoscale).
Physics are different in quantum.

In quantum scales, particles both exist and do not exist at the same time.
They are, in simple terms, everywhere and nowhere at the same time.

Entangled is a quantum state of a particle where it is present at two or more separate locations at the same time.
The cat is both alive and dead until you look.
quantum mechanics incorporates four classes of phenomena for which classical physics cannot account: quantization of certain physical properties. quantum entanglement. principle of uncertainty. wave–particle duality.
Quantum entanglement is the name given to a special connection between pairs or groups of quantum systems.

Quantum entanglement has been demonstrated experimentally with photons, neutrinos, electrons, molecules as large as buckyballs, and even small diamonds. On 13 July 2019, scientists from the University of Glasgow reported taking the first ever photo of a strong form of quantum entanglement known as Bell entanglement.

Basically you have a single particle which exists in at least two states at the same time. An action on one state affects the other with no mechanical chain of contact. It was termed a "Spooky" interaction by Albert Einstein.

It is possible to send information over a distance instantly using quantum entanglement. This is because what happens to one particle state also effects the other particle state.

Researchers in the Netherlands have just demonstrated that the quantum teleportation of information is now possible. For now, researchers are only quantum teleporting information a distance of ten feet, but conceivably, it means that larger objects can be transported even longer distances. - Jun 5, 2014
I recall reading about a more recent teleportation achievement where they teleported info to an orbiting satellite.
First Object Teleported from Earth to Orbit
Researchers in China have teleported a photon from the ground to a satellite orbiting more than 500 kilometers above.
by Emerging Technology from the arXiv
Jul 10, 2017

http://www.technologyreview.com/s/608252/first-object-teleported-from-earth-to-orbit/
The team created the first satellite-to-ground quantum network, in the process smashing the record for the longest distance over which entanglement has been measured. And they’ve used this quantum network to teleport the first object from the ground to orbit.


Quantum computing uses spooky entanglement to transfer information instantly.
In quantum computing, a qubit (/ˈkjuːbɪt/) or quantum bit (sometimes qbit) is the basic unit of quantum information—the quantum version of the classical binary bit physically realized with a two-state device.

Think of two cards laying facedown on the table.
While they are face down, you have no idea what cards they are.
They might be two exact same cards (2 of clubs) or they may be two different cards.
They remain unknown (unchanged) until you flip them over.
In quantum entanglement you know they are both 2 of clubs but when you flip to look at one, the other dissapears instantly.
The act of looking initiates an instant change of state in the other because it is quantumly entangled with the card you look at.
The action on one causes a change in the other (it disappears).
Now imagine you still have two entangled cards except one card is in front of you and the other card is on the Moon.
You flip your card and the card on the Moon disappears.
When it disappears its absense is detected by someone on the Moon.
Information is sent to the Moon instantly via quantum entanglement.

With one entangled card you can tell someone on the Moon anything.
"When the card disappears, fire the cannon." or whatever.
The spooky entanglement might not have a range.
Meaning the same instant action can happen at any distance, Mars, Pluto, Proxima Centari, etc...

I use 'disappears as an example, the card on the Moon might not disappear, it might instantly change to be a 2 of clubs or whatever.
Erm, think of it as two punch cards with no holes.
Each punchcard has a grid of boxes on it.
You punch out a pattern on your punchcard and instantly the punchcard on the Moon exhibits the same pattern.
I believe its a bit more involved than that but it explains Quantum Entanglement in simplicity.

Two quantum computers could exchange information instantly between Earth and Mars.
This occurs because of Quantum Entanglement.

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