For decades, quantum physics has been famous for describing a world that feels completely unlike our everyday experience. In the quantum world, particles like atoms, electrons, and photons can exist in strange states—sometimes acting like waves, sometimes like particles, and even becoming linked in ways that seem to defy common sense. But one big question has always remained: Can these strange quantum effects exist in large, everyday-sized objects? A new breakthrough study by researchers at the TU Wien suggests the answer is yes—at least in a surprising form of material known as a strange metal . They have shown that a centimeter-sized crystal can host strong quantum entanglement involving many particles acting together. The findings, published in Nature Physics, could reshape how scientists understand matter at large scales. From Schrödinger’s Cat to Real Materials The idea of quantum effects in large objects is not new. It goes back to the famous thought experiment of Schrödinger’s ...