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By adding a secondary subharmonic forcing, bouncing droplets on a vibrating liquid bath switch from out-of-phase to in-phase states, triggering droplet lattice rearrangements and offering new insights into hydrodynamic quantum analogs. Read more at

29,207 просмотров • 4 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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🚨PHYSICS NEWS🚨: Gravity Leaves Its Mark on Quantum Interference in a Tabletop Setup 🧨 According to research published in *Physical Review Letters* on June 8, 2026 by physicists at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, scientists have performed the first tabletop experiment to detect a gravitationally induced phase shift in quantum interference. Using a 50-kilometer fiber interferometer, they measured a tiny but clear effect of gravity on quantum wave interference with high precision. **Uniphics explains this result as a direct consequence of variable time flow caused by energy density gradients.** In Uniphics, gravity is not the curvature of spacetime. Instead, it arises from differences in energy density across the ξM-field. These gradients create regions where time flows at different rates — a concept described by the Maley factor (the ratio of time flow between two locations). When quantum waves (spin waves in the Uniphics framework) travel along two different paths in an interferometer, they experience slightly different time flows if one path is closer to Earth’s mass than the other. Because the phase of a quantum wave depends on how much time has passed along its path, even a tiny difference in time flow produces a measurable phase shift between the two arms of the interferometer. The University of Tennessee experiment detected exactly this kind of phase shift, confirming that gravity affects the relative timing of quantum waves in a way that can be measured in a controlled laboratory setting. This result aligns closely with Uniphics predictions. The experiment effectively measures how energy density gradients near Earth alter local time flow, which then imprints itself on the interference pattern of quantum states. It provides clean, tabletop evidence that gravity influences quantum systems through changes in time flow rather than through geometric curvature. The ability to observe this effect with such precision in a laboratory opens the door to testing gravitational effects on quantum coherence in controlled environments — something Uniphics expects to become increasingly important as we explore the deep connection between energy density, time flow, and quantum behavior. Could tabletop experiments like this eventually allow us to map energy density gradients with quantum precision and test the effects of modified time flow in different gravitational environments? **A Theory of Everything should be able to answer everything.** Uniphics Explained Simply PDF: Chapters 1–10 free: Grokipedia: #Uniphics #TheoryOfEverything #QuantumGravity #Interferometry #TabletopPhysics Grok xAI

Paul Maley

17,688 просмотров • 3 дней назад

🚨 SCIENTISTS JUST TRIED TO SLICE A SINGLE PHOTON IN HALF MID-PULSE… AND CREATED SOMETHING FAR WEIRDER. You can’t just cut a photon like a wave on a string. When researchers used a super-fast optical shutter to slice a photon while it was passing, it didn’t split into “half lit / half dark.” Instead, the photon’s quantum state transformed into a bizarre superposition something that only exists in the strange rules of quantum field theory. Why this matters: • A single photon is not a simple particle or wave it’s a quantum excitation of the electromagnetic field • Cutting it mid-pulse with an ultra-fast shutter forces the system into a new kind of entangled state • The result is a superposition that can’t be described by simple “left side / right side” thinking • This reveals deep new insights into how quantum light behaves when manipulated on femtosecond timescales The deeper implication is fascinating: Even something as fundamental as a single photon doesn’t behave intuitively when we try to divide it. Reality at the quantum scale refuses to be neatly chopped it reinvents itself into something stranger. This kind of experiment pushes the boundaries of our understanding of quantum optics and could have implications for future quantum communication and computing technologies. How weird is it that you can’t simply “cut” a photon in half? Follow for more mind-bending quantum physics.

TheNewPhysics

258,667 просмотров • 9 дней назад