A new study of quantum mechanics has claimed that the multiverse is real
A new study of quantum mechanics has suggested that the real multiverse could be much larger than anyone imagined.
Just like the fictional multiverse depicted in science fiction films and the Marvel superhero universe, we can also live in a world where multiple realities are possible.
This is according to a study published on the academic website Arxiv.
New interpretation and interaction method
The study referred to by The Sun describes a new interpretation of quantum mechanics.
And he supports that Parallel universes are created every time we make a decision.
A group of researchers, which included Arslan Adel from the University of California at Davis, Create one New algorithm To explore how many alternative realities there could be.
Their study focused on how particles and energy interact, and how observers like humans can change the direction of reality. They classified worldviews into subsystems and found that they were able to To create multiple “kingdoms of new worlds”.
Decision, new world
New Scientist magazine gives an example of a world where you can make coffee or a cup of tea and instantly create a new world based on your decision.
Many worlds theory He points out that a simple decision like this could lead to several different universes where you choose one or the other, and that will have an impact on your day.
“This is a good, serious and useful contribution to the growing literature on how to take the 'abstract' theory of quantum mechanics and extract from it something resembling the classical world of our experience,” he said. Sean Carroll of Johns Hopkins University in Maryland; According to New Scientist magazine.
Researchers' questions
The researchers admit that their study still leaves many questions.
What the Expanded Multiverse means for our current reality is still unclear. Whether the multiverse actually exists is another question as well.
What the study did was add to the research in this field by bringing us closer to solving the puzzle.
“We had a lot of arguments about it, and we were stuck in circles,” he says. Zoe Holmes of the Swiss Federal Technological Institute of Lausanne.
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