And what's an interroom quantum hole
@PuppyBorkbutaccountgotwiped The thing we go through when we noclip, we won’t experience it, because anything that touched it will go to the other side.
People who don't understand the quantum world will not understand this page
It's a 5, because it seems you're making a target audience
@The Smiler Human To summarise it: the paper is written by researchers, many details left out so we, the not so smart can read it.
@The Smiler Human I will remove simplify it, thank you for your response, and no, i’m not smart, i’m just putting “quantum” in it because many people refer backrooms as some sort of quantum stuff
The reason people commonly do that is because quantum fluctuations tend to make stuff no-clip, albeit very rare. It's also instability also has quantum fluctuations involved (simplified version: They say the backrooms has quantum involved because it's very random)
This makes no sense in the context of quantum physics. This isn't someone that only people who are smart will get, it's just a basic explanation of a few things coupled with massive amounts of random buzzwords thrown everywhere that make no sense.
@The Smiler Human So do you think the new version is more understandable
Also quantum fluctuations have nothing to do with noclipping
They're a random temporary increase in energy in a specific area
Noclipping is large-scale quantum tunneling , and the only way that quantum fluctuations would influence it at all would be if they happened to part of the energy "borrowed" for quantum tunneling, and even then it would probably be from the environment anyway.
Also, 99% sure atoms can't "borrow" energy from entirely different universes?
What do you think?