Can someone explain to me what's the Schrodingers cat?

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DeltaForce
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Hi, I'm new to this thread. My brother tried to explain the Schrödinger's cat to me but the explanation was vague, I became confused. Can someone explain to me in high schooler language what it is and how it works? Thanks in advance.
 
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DeltaForce said:
Hi, I'm new to this thread. My brother tried to explain the Schrödinger's cat to me but the explanation was vague, I became confused. Can someone explain to me in high schooler language what it is and how it works? Thanks in advance.
A good book in general, to get an understanding of quantum mechanics which underpins the cat thought experiment, is 'Sneaking a Look at God's Cards' - https://www.amazon.com/dp/069113037X/?tag=pfamazon01-20
 
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DeltaForce said:
My brother tried to explain the Schrödinger's cat to me but the explanation was vague, I became confused. Can someone explain to me in high schooler language what it is and how it works? Thanks in advance.
I will give it a try with the help of a Sixty Symbols video. :smile:

In quantum mechanics, objects can be in a so-called superposition of states, which is sort of a mixture of different states. However when they are measured, i.e. interacts with the environment, objects are found to be in a particular state and never in a mixture of states. The process of going from a superposition to a particular state is called wave function collapse. The Schrödinger's cat, which is a thought experiment, is taking this idea up to a macroscopic level (which in the case with the cat can not be done in reality1) in order to describe the counterintuitive process of going from a superposition of states to a particular state.

1 Nowadays, there are however a number of experiments that have managed to put large objects in superposition, though the objects have not been as large as cats.

Here is a video from Sixty Symbols about the Shrödinger's cat thought experiment:
 
DennisN said:
I will give it a try with the help of a Sixty Symbols video. :smile:

In quantum mechanics, objects can be in a so-called superposition of states, which is sort of a mixture of different states. However when they are measured, i.e. interacts with the environment, objects are found to be in a particular state and never in a mixture of states. The process of going from a superposition to a particular state is called wave function collapse.

Please do note that decoherence, which is the system (e.g. the cat) interacting with the environment, is in principle still in a superposition. That means in the thought experiment, the cat is NOT either dead or alive after decoherence, rather, as quantum mechanics predicts, a superposition of alive and dead.
 
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StevieTNZ said:
Please do note that decoherence, which is the system (e.g. the cat) interacting with the environment, is in principle still in a superposition..

The cat is not in a superposition - it is in a mixed state. It is entangled with the radioactive source. The system radioactive source and cat is in a superposition, but each part is in a mixed state.

Thanks
Bill
 
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