Heisenberg's uncertainty principle can be explained thus: 1.if it is possible to locate precisely a moving object at a given moment, 2. it is no longer possible to know its exact speed at this moment. Inversely, If one can specify the speed of a moving object at a given moment, then it will be impossible to know its exact location. 3. Certainly it is a matter of intra-atomic phenomena. The fact of observing the location of the electron—or at least the probability of its position—signifies an action in regard to it, which modifies it or changes its course. Thus, the fact of observing the phenomenon modifies its nature, so that, at a given moment, only one of the two elements can be known exactly: either its location or its speed We can later "group" these data, separately observed, in order to ignore acknowledge the simultaneous phenomenon without really knowing it at all ...
Comments
Post a Comment