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uncertainty principle
(redirected from The Uncertainty Principle)

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uncertainty principle

In quantum mechanics, the principle that it is impossible to know with unlimited accuracy the position and momentum of a particle. The principle arises because in order to locate a particle exactly, an observer must bounce light (in the form of a photon) off the particle, which must alter its position in an unpredictable way.

It was established by German physicist Werner Heisenberg, and gave a theoretical limit to the precision with which a particle's momentum and position can be measured simultaneously: the more accurately the one is determined, the more uncertainty there is in the other.



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Which German physicist formulated the uncertainty principle of quantum theory?
Think; radio waves, magnetism, the Uncertainty Principle, String Theory, and the Theory of Relativity.
The Uncertainty Principle postulates that you can measure the speed of a particle, or you can measure its position, but you can't measure both.
 
 
 
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