
The Quantum World Explained
10 Ways Physics Is Reshaping Everyday Reality
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ナレーター:
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Abby Halon
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著者:
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Lucan Merrian
このコンテンツについて
Have you ever wondered if there’s more to reality than meets the eye? Imagine a universe where a single particle can be in two places at once, where two objects separated by light-years remain mysteriously linked, and where the very act of watching can change what unfolds. This may sound like the plot of a science fiction novel, but it is the astonishing world revealed by quantum physics—a realm that continues to surprise even the scientists who study it.
The Quantum World Explained takes you on a clear, accessible journey into this hidden layer of reality. At its heart, quantum physics is the study of the universe’s smallest building blocks—atoms and the subatomic particles inside them. But what makes it so extraordinary is not simply its scale, but the rules it follows: rules that defy common sense and upend centuries of assumptions about how the universe works.
For hundreds of years, classical physics offered a clockwork model of the cosmos. Newton’s laws explained how apples fell, how planets moved, and how machines functioned. The universe appeared predictable and orderly. But in the early 20th century, cracks appeared in this tidy picture. Light behaved both as a wave and a particle. Electrons refused to follow neat orbits. Instead of certainty, scientists discovered probabilities and paradoxes.
In the wake of this revolution, pioneers such as Max Planck, Albert Einstein, Niels Bohr, Werner Heisenberg, and Erwin Schrödinger revealed a startling new framework: quantum mechanics. They found that energy came in indivisible packets called quanta. They discovered particles that could be in multiple states at once—what we now call superposition. They described entanglement, a link so profound that Einstein himself dismissed it as “spooky action at a distance.”
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