Group: sci.physics.relativity
From: "guskz@hotmail.com"
Date: Saturday, September 15, 2007 10:22 AM
Subject: Re: Uncertainty principle so uncertain they CHANGED their story around

On Sep 14, 6:43 pm, "Max Planko" wrote:
> wrote
>
> > Uncertainty principle so uncertain they CHANGED Heisenberg's
> > story around.
>
> You should stop opening countless new threads
> of things you haven't studied yet and have no clue about it.

Speaking of not having read of studied, what you wrote below is
incorrect.


> HUP is simple to understand: since measuring uses
> either photons or other particles, or a magnetic force,
> then a measurement process has a negative impact
> on the measured particle, so a measurement changes
> the location and momentum of the particle,
WRONG:

/wiki/Uncertainty_principle
quote for #1:
"The uncertainty principle in quantum mechanics is sometimes
*****erroneously***** explained by claiming that the measurement of
position necessarily disturbs a particle's momentum, and vice
versa....

Erroneously means incorrectly




> especially
> of those particles inside an atom, for example the electron.
> That's the uncertainty the HUP means.
> Read this: /wiki/Uncertainty_principle