Everything is made up of tiny pieces called quantum things, and scientists just proved it using a special kind of puzzle game.
Like playing with invisible building blocks
Imagine you're playing with blocks, but instead of seeing them, you feel them. You can't see the shapes, but you know they're there because when you move one, something changes. That's how physicists work, they use special tools to feel what’s going on inside very small things.
The puzzle game
They used a kind of puzzle game called entanglement, where two blocks are linked in a way that if you change one, the other changes too, even if it's far away. It’s like having two toy phones that always ring together, no matter how far apart they are!
By playing this game with super tiny particles, scientists showed that everything is made of these quantum pieces, just like your favorite blocks make up all your toys.
So now we know: the world around us is built from tiny invisible puzzle pieces, and scientists used a clever game to prove it!
Examples
- Tiny particles can teleport from one spot to another without touching the ground.
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See also
- What Is Quantum Entanglement?
- How Does Quantum Entanglement: Explained in REALLY SIMPLE Words Work?
- How Do Particles Know What to Do Instantly?
- How Does a Laser Work? Quantum Nature of Light?
- How Does The Holographic Universe Explained Work?