In the realm of snacks, uncertainty reigns supreme. You can't observe a snack without collapsing its state, and yet, the act of observing a snack seems to affect its very existence.

Consider Schrödinger's Snack, a thought experiment so deceptively simple: a sealed bag of chips, containing either a full complement of crunchy, salty treats or an empty space where they once lay.

You, the observer, open the bag. The mere act of doing so collapses the probability distribution of the contents, rendering the snack's state definite. But what if the bag were sealed? Does the snack's existence remain a superposition of full and empty, forever suspended in a state of uncertainty?

We may never know.