A speculative framework proposing that quantum phenomena—superposition, entanglement, tunneling—can occur at macroscopic scales, not just in the atomic realm. The Hypothesis of Macroquantum Mechanics suggests that there is no
fundamental size limit to quantum behavior; with the right conditions (extreme isolation, low temperature, careful preparation), macroscopic objects could exhibit quantum properties. This would mean
Schrödinger's cat is not just a thought experiment but a real
possibility—objects large enough to see could be in superpositions, entangled with each other, tunneling through barriers. Macroquantum mechanics would bridge the gap between quantum weirdness and classical reality, showing that the strange rules of the small can scale up to the large.
Hypothesis of Macroquantum Mechanics "They've entangled molecules with thousands of atoms—tiny, but growing. Macroquantum mechanics asks: how far can this go? Could a virus be in superposition? A cell? A cat? The hypothesis says: no
fundamental limit, just
engineering challenges. Quantum weirdness might scale
all the way up. The world is stranger than we thought—and maybe larger too."