We are aware of how skewed our perception of reality is. How we see the world is shaped by our senses, our societies, and our knowledge.
And you may want to rethink your belief that science will always provide you with an objective reality.
Physicists may now verify
a hypothesis that Nobel Prize winner Eugen Wigner initially put out in 1961.
The setting of the experiment, dubbed "Wigner's Friend," is not too
difficult. You begin with a quantum system that is in superposition, which
implies that both of its states exist concurrently up to the point of
measurement. In this illustration, the polarization (the axis on which a photon
spins) is both horizontal and vertical.
When they measure it, the
system will collapse and the photon will be stuck into one of those two states.
Wigner's buddy is in the lab doing the experiment. However, the quantum
system—which, crucially, also includes the lab—remains in superposition for
Wigner, who is outside the lab and uninformed of the outcome of the experiment.
Despite having different outcomes, they are both accurate. (If Schrödinger and
his cat-in-a-box were both in a box, this would be analogous to Schrödinger's
cat, a thought experiment regarding superposition.) As a result, it seems as if
Wigner's reality and his friend's reality coexist. And that's a difficulty.
It has been impossible to
test this theory for a very long time. Wigner finds it difficult to calculate
the quantum mechanics formula after seeing his buddy do an experiment. However,
owing to recent advances, scientists were able to create a quantum mechanics
experiment that would precisely replicate that.
A cutting-edge six-photon
experiment and the system's four entangled observers demonstrated that while
one component of the system generated a measurement, the other revealed that
the measurement had not been made. At once, two realities were measured.
According to the study, this supports the claim made by quantum theories whose
framework already takes observer dependence into account.
In their study, which has
not yet undergone peer review but is accessible to read on ArXiv, the
researchers state that "this throws into doubt the objective character of
the facts established by the two observers.
"Can their various
records be reconciled, or are they fundamentally incompatible—making it
impossible for them to be regarded as objective, observer-independent
"facts of the world"?
The influence and limits
of the observers are well understood, despite the fact that science is the
finest instrument we have for understanding reality. Observers may not see
simultaneous occurrences at the same time, according to relativity. We learn
from quantum physics that observers have an impact on their experiments. Now it
seems that two worlds may exist simultaneously, at least at the quantum level
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