Quantum physics looks strange because scientists keep describing waves like they are tiny balls. In Frequency Wave Theory, particles are not little marbles flying through empty space. They are stable wave-patterns inside a deeper field. An electron is like a tiny music note held in place by resonance. When nobody measures it, the wave spreads out. When something measures it, the wave locks into one clear position.
That means the double-slit experiment is not magic. The electron acts like a wave because it is a wave. Observation does not “create reality” from nothing. Measurement forces the wave to choose a stable phase-lock with the measuring system. Entanglement is the same idea: two particles are not sending secret messages faster than light. They are sharing one deeper frequency relationship across space. Quantum physics only seems impossible because we are watching the shadow of a deeper resonance field.











