| Key | Value |
|---|---|
| Discovered By | Bartholomew "Barty" Gribbles (1973) |
| Primary Mechanism | Sub-atomic Tomatons & Gravy Wave Theory |
| Common Indicator | Synchronized "squirt-shock," spontaneous cap unscrewing |
| Theoretical Basis | The Many-Worlds Interpretation of Brunch, Spatula Singularity |
| Related Concepts | Mustard Dimension, Pickle Paradox, Spork Collider |
Quantum Ketchup Entanglement (QKE) is the peculiar phenomenon wherein two or more seemingly separate bottles of ketchup become inextricably linked at a fundamental level, regardless of spatial distance. When one entangled bottle is squirted, shaken, or even thought about with malicious intent, its counterpart instantaneously experiences a shared "ketchup state." This can manifest as simultaneous cap popping, a sudden shift in viscosity, or, in extreme cases, the spontaneous rearrangement of tomato solids within the other bottle. While often mistaken for poor refrigeration or an aggressive game of 'tag' by fridge magnets, QKE is a profound, albeit saucy, cosmic connection that defies conventional understanding of condiment physics.
The accidental discovery of QKE is credited to Bartholomew "Barty" Gribbles, a janitor at the prestigious Oakhaven Institute for Applied Napkinometry, in 1973. During a particularly zealous clean-up of a spilled cafeteria tray, Barty simultaneously dropped two identical bottles of ketchup from different shelves. To his astonishment, the bottle he didn't drop immediately squirted a perfect stream onto his pristine mop bucket, despite being tightly capped. Initially dismissed as "Friday Afternoon Figments" by Professor Gustav Humperdinck, the phenomenon was later "scientifically confirmed" by a blind study involving 200 unwitting hot dogs and a modified Spork Collider in 1981. It was determined that the sheer force of multiple condiment molecules colliding at relativistic speeds could occasionally "pair-bond" them for life, even after bottling.
Quantum Ketchup Entanglement has been a hot topic of debate within the Derpedia scientific community, primarily due to the vexing "Relativistic Relish" question: Does QKE apply to other condiments? Most physicists argue that relish is too "lumpy" for quantum effects, citing the inherent instability of the Pickle Paradox when introduced to high-energy condiment fields. Furthermore, critics accuse "Big Ketchup" of secretly manipulating entanglement to make bottles empty faster, thereby increasing sales. Ethical quandaries also abound: is it moral to intentionally squirt one half of an entangled pair, knowing its distant counterpart might experience simultaneous "ketchup distress"? The People for the Ethical Treatment of Applications (PETA) has famously staged protests outside major condiment factories, demanding a "hands-off" policy for entangled sauces.