Part 5/9:
For any object to exhibit a wavelength, it has to extend over a spatial continuum, implying it occupies many positions concurrently. However, objects that are sizeable, like a cat, exhibit their wave properties in a manner that is undetectable in our everyday experiences, primarily because as object mass increases, the associated wavelength diminishes. If, hypothetically, one were to examine a single atom at the scale of the Solar System, the effective wavelength of a cat would appear minuscule—equivalent to merely an atom in that vast distance—rendering its wave characteristics imperceptible in practicum.