- Fixbeat ( @Fixbeat@lemmy.ml ) English7•7 months ago
Somewhat related question about this meme…are both girls the same?
- bstix ( @bstix@feddit.dk ) English10•7 months ago
No. There was three models. It’s a whole series of photos. The “couple” did an interview some years ago. The girl in red has not been identified.
- Fixbeat ( @Fixbeat@lemmy.ml ) English1•7 months ago
Okay thanks. They do look a lot alike to me. Could be sisters.
- ivanafterall ( @ivanafterall@kbin.social ) 7•7 months ago
He’s hoping for an entanglement, but his girlfriend is running an interference pattern.
- KomfortablesKissen ( @KomfortablesKissen@discuss.tchncs.de ) English6•7 months ago
So the unobserved quantum states observe the observer? Every one of them, all the time? I KNEW I wasn’t crazy!
- amelia ( @amelia@feddit.de ) English3•7 months ago
Ok this made me laugh out loud. Good job.
- EmperorHenry ( @EmperorHenry@discuss.tchncs.de ) English3•7 months ago
That would be awesome to have a harem of the same woman from 100 different universes.
Like the “me” they were all married to in their home universes all died somehow and they came to our universe to be with me.
- Dippy ( @Dippy@beehaw.org ) English2•7 months ago
Can 2 observers simultaneously see different things?
- skeptomatic ( @skeptomatic@lemmy.ca ) English4•7 months ago
I believe the measuring apparatus “sees” the outcome and causes the collapse of the wave function. Then the results would look the same to 2 human observers. Apparently there’s some debate amongst physicists on what constitutes an “observer”.
- psud ( @psud@aussie.zone ) English2•7 months ago
If there’s anything to see the quantum state has collapsed. The universe is the observer, an emitted photon is an example of an event that will be observed
That is why only tiny things and things near absolute zero exhibit quantum effects
This comment might be simplified too far to be close enough to accurate. I don’t know the complex explanation, I’m not skilled in the right sorts of maths