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Perception fractures, the real blurs with the unreal, and a transformative universe begins to take shape. A quantum odyssey at the intersection of music, art, and technology. This is Anyma at [UNVRS]. TICKETS:

29,613 Aufrufe • vor 1 Jahr •via X (Twitter)

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Profilbild von 𝕃𝕠𝕦𝕚𝕤 💫
𝕃𝕠𝕦𝕚𝕤 💫vor 1 Jahr

OMG

Profilbild von RedDeer.Games
RedDeer.Gamesvor 2 Jahren

Romantic adventure in space! Nirvana is filled with a retro sci-fi anime vibe neon lights, beautiful women and ultra-fast spaceships. Join exciting Nirvana Pilots👩‍✈️👩‍✈️👩‍✈️ #xBox ❤️ #Nintendo ❤️

Profilbild von James Ill
James Illvor 1 Jahr

Omg cant wait ! First time in Ibiza. Any guestlist possible please ? :)

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🚨 SCIENTISTS JUST DETECTED QUANTUM ENTANGLEMENT IN A CENTIMETER-SIZED PIECE OF METAL SOMETHING ONCE THOUGHT IMPOSSIBLE AT THIS SCALE. Researchers at the Vienna University of Technology have found clear evidence of high-degree quantum entanglement among particles inside a macroscopic crystal of a “strange metal” made of cerium, palladium, and silicon. This is one of the first times multipartite entanglement has been convincingly demonstrated in a solid object large enough to hold in your hand. Strange metals are already bizarre their electrons don’t behave like normal individual particles. Now it appears large numbers of them can act as a single, highly entangled quantum system even at everyday scales. Why this matters: • Quantum entanglement has almost always been limited to tiny numbers of particles in carefully isolated lab conditions • This experiment shows entanglement can persist collectively across a visible, macroscopic object • It was measured using neutron scattering, which revealed the material responding as one entangled system rather than many independent particles • This bridges the gap between microscopic quantum effects and real-world materials The deeper implication: For decades, physicists have wondered whether the strange, collective behavior seen in certain quantum materials could be explained by underlying entanglement. This result strongly suggests the answer is yes even at scales we can see and touch. It doesn’t mean your coffee mug is in a quantum superposition, but it does show that quantum correlations can dominate the physics of certain solids in ways we’re only beginning to understand. This kind of macroscopic quantum behavior could eventually help us design new materials with exotic properties, or give us new tools to study fundamental questions about quantum mechanics itself. How do you think discovering entanglement at this scale changes our understanding of where the quantum world ends and the classical world begins? Follow for more frontier quantum physics and materials science.

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