@thebattlebunker: yeah it was definitely 50... #battlebus #battlebunker #pullups #workout #legtuck Quantum physics is basically the study of how reality works at extremely tiny scales, like atoms, electrons, photons, and other subatomic particles. The weird part is that once you get that small, things stop behaving the way we expect. In everyday life, objects are pretty straightforward. A ball is in one place, moving in one direction, at one speed. But in quantum physics, a particle can act more like a “cloud of possibilities” rather than one definite thing. For example, an electron is not always best understood as a tiny little ball orbiting an atom. It is more like a probability field, where it has a chance of being found in certain places. Once you measure it, you get one actual result, but before that, quantum physics describes it through probabilities. Another big idea is that energy comes in little packets, called quanta. Light, for example, can behave like a wave, but it also comes in particles called photons. That is one of the strange things about quantum physics: tiny things can act like both waves and particles depending on how you observe them. There is also something called superposition, which means a quantum object can be in multiple possible states at once until it is measured. This is where the famous Schrödinger’s cat idea comes from. It is not really about a cat being magically alive and dead at the same time; it is a thought experiment meant to show how strange quantum rules sound when applied to normal everyday objects. Then there is entanglement, which is when two particles become linked in such a way that measuring one tells you something about the other, even if they are far apart. It sounds like sci-fi, but it is a real part of quantum physics. It does not let us send messages faster than light, but it does show that particles can be connected in ways that do not match our normal intuition. So, in plain terms, quantum physics says that the universe is not perfectly predictable at the smallest level. Instead, it runs on probabilities. Tiny particles do not always have one clear path, position, or state until they interact with something or are measured. It is strange, but it is also extremely practical. A lot of modern technology depends on quantum physics, including lasers, computer chips, MRI machines, solar panels, and the early development of quantum computers.
Battle Bunker
Region: US
Wednesday 27 May 2026 23:31:18 GMT
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E.M98 :
that constantly moving, not fixed hang bar makes it harder
2026-06-08 16:48:56
99
Boston332 :
Hitting the club with $15 😳
2026-06-09 08:39:00
23
teepee :
who tf carries paper money
2026-06-09 18:39:34
1
D’Marie :
He was adorable! “50 not 15!”
2026-06-02 06:38:57
12
Trevor T :
Love those straps!
2026-06-02 14:31:19
0
Ella Forgione :
💪💪💪great job
2026-06-08 23:38:07
0
Jovanduh :
did he just say- Tonight the night
2026-06-08 13:15:11
5
Ol'Timer :
I would love to run into this somewhere.😏
2026-06-09 16:42:06
2
Shirley :
🙏
2026-05-30 03:49:15
1
Shirley :
🙏
2026-05-28 05:02:56
0
Shirley :
🙏🙏🙏
2026-05-28 04:10:23
0
Yaquelin :
💪💪💪🥰
2026-05-28 06:58:30
0
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