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/sci/ - Science & Math


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10789187 No.10789187 [Reply] [Original]

Can it be, all the difficult to explain phenomena that's going on, on a subatomic level, is so, cuz there's a certain threshold, from where, if the objects have small enough mass, they aren't affected by time/gravity enough to fully exist in our timespace and so an electron can be in many places at once, coz from it's perspective, time doesn't exist and it has infinite time to hop around, etc

>> No.10789461

>>10789187
What's your first language?

>> No.10789739

>>10789461
Hindi. Why?

>> No.10789752

>>10789739
Your English is much better than my Hindi, because I don't know any Hindi. That said, the shortcomings of your English are a serious obstacle to communication.

In answer to your question, electrons are affected by time and gravity, as are photons. This can be illustrated by the phenomenon of gravitational lensing, where the sun's gravity warps the path of subatomic particles and radiation both. So there seems to be no such threshold, as even photons (which are massless) are still affected by gravity.