here.

let me explain.

once definition occurs, we know.

How do measurements collapse quantum wavefunctions?

In the strange realm of electrons, photons and the other fundamental particles, quantum mechanics is law. Particles don’t behave like tiny balls, but rather like waves that are spread over a large area. Each particle is described by a “wavefunction,” or probability distribution, which tells what its location, velocity, and other properties are more likely to be, but not what those properties are. The particle actually has a range of values for all the properties, until you experimentally measure one of them — its location, for example — at which point the particle’s wavefunction “collapses” and it adopts just one location. [Newborn Babies Understand Quantum Mechanics]

But how and why does measuring a particle make its wavefunction collapse, producing the concrete reality that we perceive to exist? The issue, known as the measurement problem, may seem esoteric, but our understanding of what reality is, or if it exists at all, hinges upon the answer.

something from nothing?

we don’t have something from nothing.

we have nothing from nothing.

nothing is not space.

nothing is negative dimension.

a knot of equal and opposite dimension.

forming positive and negative dimension.

we call negative dimension a point particle.

what is anti-matter?

a shadow.

a shadow of positive dimension.

a shadow of negative dimension.

the shadow of a knot: anti-matter lurking in the shadows

the shadow of a knot, which has positive dimensions is negative dimension.

a positive dimension has a potential dimension. called anti-matter.

anti-matter exits as a potential.  potential anti-dimension.

the shadow of this potential is anti-negative dimension, the gravity of anti-matter.

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first edition: bit confuding

look at the shadow of a knot.

that’s the negative dimension of gravity.

the potential of a knot is anti-matter.

the shadow of potential anti-matter is negative anti-matter.

 

 

double slit and two places at once

of course.

equal and opposite relative definition.

“Much like a particle in a double slit experiment, which travels on two different paths at the same time, the electron can take part in two different processes at the same time,” explained researcher Joachim Burgdörfer.

what is defined is a function of equal and opposite relativity.