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kvante

Kvante is a term used in physics to denote the smallest discrete unit of a physical quantity that can be quantified. The concept is central to quantum mechanics and applies to quantities such as energy, angular momentum, and electric charge, which can occur only in multiples of a fundamental amount (for example, electric charge is quantized in units of the elementary charge e). In the context of light, a kvante can be described as a quantum of light called a photon, with energy given by E = hν, where h is Planck’s constant and ν is the frequency of the light.

Quantization explains many phenomena that classical physics cannot account for. In atoms, energy levels are discrete,

Key principles associated with kvante include superposition, where systems can exist in multiple states simultaneously; entanglement,

Applications of quantum concepts span technology and science, including semiconductors and lasers, magnetic resonance imaging, and

so
electrons
can
occupy
only
certain
states
and
must
absorb
or
emit
energy
in
fixed
quanta
to
transition
between
them.
This
led
to
the
development
of
quantum
mechanics
in
the
early
20th
century,
building
on
Planck’s
blackbody
ideas
and
Einstein’s
explanation
of
the
photoelectric
effect,
and
culminating
in
the
formulations
of
Schrödinger,
Heisenberg,
and
Dirac.
where
distant
systems
exhibit
correlated
properties;
and
the
uncertainty
principle,
which
limits
the
precision
of
certain
pairs
of
measurements.
Interpretations
of
quantum
mechanics
vary,
from
the
Copenhagen
interpretation
to
many-worlds
or
pilot-wave
theories.
emerging
fields
such
as
quantum
computing
and
quantum
communication.
The
kvante
framework
fundamentally
changed
our
understanding
of
nature
at
the
smallest
scales.