MIT: How Growth of the Scientific Enterprise Influenced a Century of Quantum Physics
April 29, 2020
April 29, 2020
CAMBRIDGE, Massachusetts, April 29 -- The Massachusetts Institute of Technology issued the following news:
Austrian quantum theorist Erwin Schrodinger first used the term "entanglement," in 1935, to describe the mind-bending phenomenon in which the actions of two distant particles are bound up with each other. Entanglement was the kind of thing that could keep Schrodinger awake at night; like his friend Albert Einstein, he thought it cast doubt on quantum mechanics as a vi . . .
Austrian quantum theorist Erwin Schrodinger first used the term "entanglement," in 1935, to describe the mind-bending phenomenon in which the actions of two distant particles are bound up with each other. Entanglement was the kind of thing that could keep Schrodinger awake at night; like his friend Albert Einstein, he thought it cast doubt on quantum mechanics as a vi . . .