Schrodinger's Cat: Episode of Parallel Reality For many years, there was a concept of parallel reality in science fiction literary circles. One of the key concepts behind alternative dimensions is whether each action and decision - whether consciously produced - or another alternative dimension has opposite behavior or decision, each of the other options is unique There is some follow-up reality. Ursula LeGuin's short story "Schrodinger's Cat" directly reflects the concept of parallel reality, and this story tells about experiments that create countless parallel reality.
November 29, 1935, 82 years ago, OwenSchrödinger announced one of the most famous thought experiments of all science. "Schrodinger's Cat". In this exercise, a fictitious cat is hidden in a box containing a poison bottle, a small amount of radioactive material, and a hanger-covered Geiger counter. If the Geiger counter detects radioactive material collapse - known as radioactivity - the hammer will crush the venom bottle and kill the cat. In thought experiments, the probability of substance collapse is equal to the probability of not collapsing. Therefore Schrodinger concluded that in a sense, the cat is only lying in the box and is alive or dead. The state of the cat is settled only when the observer sees the inside.
In the well-known Schrodinger cat thought experiment, the cat was confined in the radioactive isotope box, so it had a decay rate of 50% and caused a hammer to kill the cat. Before the box is opened, the cat is deemed alive because it is considered to be in a super strong state. You are an observer who peeps at the box at a certain time and asks "Hey, what are you doing there?" At that point experience tends to be positive or negative, you will get the answer. The problem is that the answer is inconsistent in observation and depends on the background and emotional state of the subject.
You might notice that there is an entry for "Schrödinger 's Cat" on the dashboard. The reason is very simple, like the cat of the famous schrodinger experiment, I can not find the data to see if some cats are alive or dead. I can make an educational assumption that a cat began working in 1964 ... but I think it is worth leaving an uncertain position. I just mark them "not working" and imagine the life of a retired British government's cat. The motive for this sort is very interesting. Like other data infrastructures, proper registration should provide the foundation for people to build services and find insight, but excellent dashboards motivate actions based on specific goals and strategies You should. My goal is to have more cats on the web. Registry and dashboard are the way for others to help me. Submit more cats