Love is an Intertwining.
Being at a distance can hurt. We have all experienced being away from our loved ones our loved ones, either in time or space, in complete helplessness.
Quantum Entanglement was born by denying distance. Schrödinger found that particles could stay connected no matter how far apart they were. If they interacted in the past, they maintain the connection.
Let's consider particles that only know how to answer one question, "yes" or "no". Let's put a pair of these particles in interaction, so that they always give opposite answers. The first one will answer randomly, and the second one will answer the opposite of the first one.
But now, to make things more interesting, let's move the particles very far apart. Still, every time you ask the same question to both of them, you get opposite answers, whichever one it is. Whichever one it is, this is 100% REAL!
This phenomenon is known as the Einstein-Podolski-Rosen Paradox (EPR).
Imagine being able to use this technology to have real-time communication throughout the Universe!
This entanglement is harnessed by scientists to design quantum communication algorithms and quantum computers.
Entanglement Denies the Existence of Distance
How common is it to find entangled particles?
Yes, very. Almost all of our electrons are strongly entangled with their neighbours, either in the same atom or in neighbouring atoms, forming chemical bonds. These entanglement bonds are of short distance. You can take any piece of matter and ask "how many entanglement bonds does this block have with the rest of the Universe?" The answer is proportional to its surface area. Why? Because the electrons living inside the block only have entanglement bonds with other electrons inside the block. Only electrons "on the surface" can be entangled with electrons on the outside.
Now imagine a block in which every electron is entangled with a partner outside. Life in this block is strange. Each electron is paired with another one that is outside your field of view. It's impossible to know where it is. So when you ask them questions, the electrons respond in strange ways, as if they are crazy.
They're not crazy - they're in love! Intertwined
You've probably heard that Space can Curve. In fact Space is Curved. Curvature is what we interpret as the force of gravity.
The Einstein-Rosen (ER) bridges.
If Space can be curved, maybe it can also be cut and pasted. Why not? And then maybe we can build "shortcuts" in space, connections between distant places. Want to travel from Madrid to Vladivostok quickly? No problem! An ER bridge can help you.
If the particles of an entangled pair appear to be far apart, it's because they are
connected by an ER bridge that you can't see. So, whenever you see entangled pairs, you are noticing the curvature of space at the quantum level!
Distance Does Not Exist.
The recipe for happiness is to intertwine with your loved ones, united forever, creating an ER Bridge, regardless of distance or time. Always Permanently Connected.
In quantum physics we can explain why we are cosmically connected to others.
We have all felt the influence of another person even when we are separated from them. A kind of transcendental cosmic link: a secret mechanism behind the synchronicity of our dreams, or thoughts on the fly that later turn out to have been identical to those of the distant being (like a kind of telepathy).
Quantum physics explains these links with entanglement or Quantum entanglement. This is the connection between subatomic particles that do not share the same space, but have been in contact at some point in time.
Doesn't this strange connection with the other also break the rules of the established? How is it that we feel so close, when we are so far away? Perhaps this can be explained by non-locality.
Falling in love with someone we don't know and who is far away?
A recent study, published in Science Daily, found that there was another form of non-locality in addition to those already known.
The new theory postulated the connection between particles that have never interacted with each other and may not even know each other, but share a kind of fundamental connection that researchers have explained through the metaphor of emotions and bonds in love.
It is something like the connection we might have felt as children with an imaginary friend, the platonic love of youth for a rockstar, or that crush on someone we don't know physically, but perhaps know through letters or a social network.
As happens in love or friendship, in quantum physics subatomic particles are capable of creating a bond beyond a shared space, and even beyond whether they have interacted or not.
So far it seems obvious why physicist Niels Bohr compared the language of atoms to poetry, saying:
"When it comes to atoms, language can be used only as poetry. The poet is not so much concerned with describing facts as with creating images and establishing mental connections."
This subatomic connectivity can only be explained by reinventing time itself.
Subatomic love beyond time
The link between subatomic particles can be timeless. This explains the connection between what we could call the "love-particles" in the theory of non-locality.
According to the researchers of the above-mentioned study, conducted at Chapman University, there is a certain "indeterminacy" created by time in the quantum world. The present is not only affected by the past, but also by the future. Particles in the quantum world link the future with the past in subtle and meaningful ways, transcending them in ways that make us think of the possibility of space travel or quantum teleportation.
Thus, these particles can link and influence each other beyond time, no matter what the future holds.
Would we love, even if one universe stood between us and the other? Perhaps we would. After all, love and the mechanics of subatomic particles seem to be the forces that shape the cosmos as a whole. Both are inexplicable and random, but inalienable.