Experience the paradox where observation defines reality. Is the cat alive, dead, or both?
INITIATE EXPERIMENTA sealed chamber contains a single radioactive atom, a Geiger counter, a vial of poison, and a trigger hammer. If the atom decays, the counter detects it and activates the hammer to shatter the vial, releasing the poison.
A cat is placed inside the chamber with the apparatus. The cat's fate becomes quantum mechanically entangled with the atom's decay state. Until observed, the cat exists in superposition—simultaneously alive and dead.
Adjust the quantum parameters to alter the probability wave function.
Warning: Observation collapses the wave function.
Understanding the paradox requires abandoning classical intuition.
Before measurement, the quantum system exists in all possible states simultaneously. The cat is neither alive nor dead, but a linear combination of both states until observed.
The act of measurement forces the system to "choose" a definite state. This is known as Wave Function Collapse. The observer is not passive; they are an active participant in reality.
The thought experiment highlights the conflict between the quantum world (probabilities) and the macroscopic world (definite outcomes). It challenges our understanding of life and death at a fundamental level.