The Quark Side - Quantum Physics Podcast

Quantum Physics Without Quantum Rules?

25 min · 18. juni 2026
episode Quantum Physics Without Quantum Rules? cover

Description

Researchers at MIT have proposed a method to reproduce quantum mechanics using only classical principles. By extending the principle of least action to include fluid-like density and multiple paths, they recover the exact results of the Schrödinger equation. Phenomena like tunneling and the double-slit experiment emerge naturally from this framework, not as fundamentally “quantum” oddities. The result points to a deeper unity between classical and quantum physics—suggesting that the microscopic world may be less mysterious, and more continuous with familiar laws, than previously thought. This episode includes AI-generated content.

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51 episodes

episode Memory or Illusion? The Observer Effect in Quantum Systems artwork

Memory or Illusion? The Observer Effect in Quantum Systems

A study reveals a striking paradox: quantum systems can both retain and lose information at the same time, depending on how they are observed. Researchers show that quantum memory isn’t absolute—it shifts based on whether we track the system’s evolving states or its measurable properties. This means processes that appear memoryless may actually contain hidden records encoded in their structure. Understanding this duality is key to building more stable quantum computers, resistant to noise and information loss. By redefining how information behaves at microscopic scales, this discovery opens new paths for quantum communication, sensing, and computation—and challenges the idea that reality is independent of perspective.

4. juni 202620 min