leandrogarin37p2g5ds
27.04.2021 •
History
How did the concept of imperialism influence American foreign policy in the late 19th and early 20th century?
Solved
Show answers
More tips
- D Dating, Love, Relationships How Long Can Love Last?...
- A Auto and Moto Mastering One-Movement Parking: All You Need to Know...
- C Computers and Internet How to Properly Order Clothing from International Online Stores...
- H Health and Medicine Headache: A Comprehensive Guide to Treatment...
- F Family and Home How to Choose the Best Diapers for Your Baby?...
- A Auto and Moto Discovering the Leader: What is the Most Expensive Car in the World?...
- F Food and Cooking How to Quickly Put your Child to Sleep?...
- C Computers and Internet How to Create a Website for Free and Easy?...
- F Family and Home Parquet or laminate, which is better?...
- H Health and Medicine Coughing: Causes, Types, and Treatment Methods...
Answers on questions: History
- B Business Shale Oil Corporation combines its assets and debts with those of Tierra Frakking Company to form Unified Resources, Inc. Shale and Tierra cease to exist Refer to Fact Pattern...
- S Social Studies Emanuel is babysitting his 8-month old brother and 4-month old niece. The kids had been playing with blocks for a while when it was time to stop and pick up before having a snack....
- M Mathematics Remember, adjectives in Spanish agree with the gender of the noun they describe. Por ejemplo: el chico ordenado / la chica artística...
Ответ:
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle enunciated in 1927, postulates that the fact that each particle has a wave associated with it, imposes restrictions on the ability to determine its position and speed at the same time.
In other words:
It is impossible to measure simultaneously (according to quantum physics), and with absolute precision, the value of the position and the momentum (linear momentum) of a particle.
So, the greater certainty is seeked in determining the position of a particle, the less is known its linear momentum and, therefore, its mass and velocity.
In general, the greater the precision in the measurement of one of these magnitudes, the greater the uncertainty in the measure of the other complementary variable.
This principle is one of the fundamentals of quantum mechanics that differentiates it from Newtonian mechanics, which stablishes a physical macroscopic model to describe the movement of bodies in space with fixed properties, whereas according to quantum mechanics it is not so.
Both theories offer very different descriptions of the world, incompatible with each other, but both are valid in their fields of application.