Water can shove its head through a rock by dripping on it relentlessly.
And softer materials can wear down harder materials if given time.   On the
nanoparticle scale, perhaps all that's needed is a few billion iterations
to get tunneling, and that can happen in a matter of milliseconds or maybe
picoseconds.

On Sun, Jun 11, 2017 at 9:27 PM, <mix...@bigpond.com> wrote:

> In reply to  Axil Axil's message of Sun, 11 Jun 2017 16:53:59 -0400:
> Hi,
> [snip]
> >Entanglement is not subject to space time. A particle is a wave function
> that can combine with another identical wave function copies to produce a
> new wave function that is double the magnitude of each original identical
> wave functions.
> >The addition of wave functions is true for any BEC on "N" particles. The
> composite wave function is singular but N times the magnitude of each
> member of the BEC aggregate.
> >Particles are not billiard balls; they are waves.
>
> Since your head is made of particles (sorry waves), and the wall is made of
> particles (sorry waves), then you shouldn't have any difficulty shoving
> your
> head through the wall, now should you?
>
> (Somehow I doubt you will try this though.)
>
> Regards,
>
> Robin van Spaandonk
>
> http://rvanspaa.freehostia.com/project.html
>
>

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