The scales of the “Schrödinger's cat” paradox
'Schrödinger's cat' is a thought experiment, sometimes described as a paradox, it was devised by the Austrian-Irish physicist Erwin Shiner in 1935, during his discussions and debates with Albert Einstein, what he tries to do is illustrate what he saw as the problem of the Copenhagen interpretation of quantum mechanics and what was basically debated was about the quantum state of a superposition, which is a situation in which a particle like An electron or an atom or any other particle can be in multiple states at once, rather than choosing one of those states specifically.
This paradox, that until you open the box you cannot confirm if the cat is alive or dead, you have to assume that it is alive and dead at the same time because it depends on a subatomic particle that is in a state of superposition, you can do this paradox extend and to limits that are amazing; Imagine that we are outside that laboratory where the box with the cat is and we have a monitor connected to the laboratory that is turned off, the monitor and that the person who put the poison in the box went out of his way and put so much poison that it can kill those who open the box.
And we can continue going up, last November 9 marked the 90th anniversary of the birth of Carl Sagan and one of his famous phrases was “we are the means for the cosmos to know itself, but to know it is to observe it and if by observing it we are determining his death”; It seems amazing, but in 2007 a very curious article was published titled “the observation of the universe has accelerated its end.”
The images without reference were created with AI
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