Quantum physics has a reputation for being strange, paradoxical, and deeply confusing. Particles are said to be in two places at once. Observation is said to create reality. Consciousness is said to influence matter. None of this is how the theory actually works.
Demystifying Quantum Physics explains quantum theory as it is understood by physicists, not as it is misrepresented in popular culture. It shows why quantum physics is precise rather than vague, structured rather than mystical, and powerful without being magical.
The book is organised into four distinct parts. It begins with an intuitive narrative that builds a feel for quantum behaviour without equations. It then traces the historical development of quantum theory, focusing on experiments and discoveries rather than mythology. The core of the book presents a clear, non-mathematical account of quantum states, measurement, probability, superposition, interference, entanglement, and decoherence. The final part answers the questions people actually ask, separating genuine puzzles from persistent misunderstandings.
This is not a book about interpretations, metaphysics, or speculative claims. It is a book about what quantum physics does, what it predicts, where it applies, and where its limits lie.
Written for curious readers, students, and anyone who wants a clear picture without equations, Demystifying Quantum Physics replaces confusion with understanding and mystery with structure.