Question:
What is Quantum Jumping? And, is there any hard evidence that such a thing exists?
Lawrence Y
2009-10-07 06:35:33 UTC
There is a confirmation from a certain person that he has truly experience quantum jumping. There is a whole new industry based on this belief.
Five answers:
l z
2009-10-07 06:42:48 UTC
Short answer: It's a crock of [deleted]



Longer answer, see article below
Mellicent
2015-08-04 12:26:07 UTC
RE:

What is Quantum Jumping? And, is there any hard evidence that such a thing exists?

There is a confirmation from a certain person that he has truly experience quantum jumping. There is a whole new industry based on this belief.
Okapi
2009-10-09 16:16:07 UTC
NO. NO. No. Absolutely NOT. There is not a CHANCE of this. It is a lie. You should probably just ignore it, as it is implausible and likely detrimental to your health. Please. Just move on.



A quantum jump is when a subatomic particle leaves one energy level and enters another energy level, resulting in a change in the appearance of the general cloud of probability around the nucleus. Really. I'm not lying. You can look it up on Wikipedia. Or in a book. Or in an encyclopaedia. Or in a website, which does not specialize in selling wishes. Wishes are basically worthless. There is a popular saying about wishes and hands and raw sewage. This saying is true. Actually, you could quickly fill a hand with this. For it is both wishes AND raw sewage.



The closest actual principle to this imaginary principle is that of quantum tunneling, which is entirely theoretical in large objects. I am not lying. However, computers would not work at all without this principle. Believe me.



Ffglkjnaerfgk kldrf. That is what your question looks like. I actually copied and pasted that.



And now you've broken my heart.
flutzpah
2009-10-07 06:46:58 UTC
It's unfortunate that peddlers of wooish bull have decided to take a perfectly functional, well-defined term ("quantum jump") and apply it to their particular brand of money-making crazy.



There is no evidence, hard or otherwise, that such a thing exists.
Terry D
2009-10-09 15:16:44 UTC
Electrons circling an atom make quantum jumps to other energy levels, but no particles large enough to see can do this- not even frogs.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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