Kristijan Bartol

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Quite unlike the smooth, predictable Schrödinger evolution of a single quantum such as an electron, a quantum jump is a discontinuous and indeterminate alteration of a system’s quantum state that occurs when the system interacts with another system. If one of the systems is macroscopic, and if the change of this macroscopic system’s quantum state results in a macroscopic impression such as an observable flash, the interaction becomes a quantum measurement.
Tales of the Quantum: Understanding Physics' Most Fundamental Theory
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