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A single electron (a quantum of matter) behaves like a particle when you look for a dot on a screen, but like a wave when you send it through two slits. It is a wavicle —a unit of something that refuses to be pinned down. The quantum isn’t a tiny ball. It’s a probability distribution that collapses into a point only when measured.
In physics, that crumb is the (plural: quanta ). For most of history, we assumed nature was smooth—a continuous river of energy, space, and time. But in 1900, Max Planck made a shocking admission: Energy comes in tiny, indivisible packets. quanta r
But here’s what we do know: The universe is not a smooth movie. It’s a flipbook. Each quantum is a single page. And while we cannot see the page turning, we can measure the flip. A single electron (a quantum of matter) behaves
There is a joke among physicists: “If you think you understand quantum mechanics, you don’t understand quantum mechanics.” It’s a probability distribution that collapses into a