Infinite multiverses and where to find them?
Anubhav Kumar Srivastava, Pavel P. Popov, Guillem M\"uller-Rigat, Maciej Lewenstein

TL;DR
This paper explores quantum physics interpretations, specifically Copenhagen and many-worlds, discussing the possibility of multiple universes and why we haven't encountered other versions of ourselves.
Contribution
It compares two major quantum interpretations and discusses the implications of multiple universes for understanding reality.
Findings
Copenhagen interpretation explains quantum phenomena through wavefunction collapse.
Many-worlds interpretation suggests all possible outcomes occur in separate universes.
The paper discusses the philosophical implications of multiverses in quantum physics.
Abstract
Have you ever watched superhero movies like Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse? Or played games where your choices create different outcomes? What if we told you that in the real world, something even crazier might be happening all the time, right under our noses? Imagine shrinking down to the size of an atom. What you'd see wouldn't be like our everyday world at all! This is the realm of quantum physics, where the rules we know do not apply, where things exist everywhere and nowhere at once. The moment you observe something, it starts behaving differently. In this article, we will explore two of the many possible explanations for such phenomena, namely the Copenhagen interpretation and the many-worlds interpretation of quantum physics. We will also try to answer the question of whether there are many copies of you roaming around in different universes, and why you haven't met one.
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Mechanics and Applications · Relativity and Gravitational Theory · Advanced Mathematical Theories and Applications
