Chemistry, asked by Korangadevs1666, 10 months ago

Why heisenberg uncertainty principle is not applicable for a bigger partciles?

Answers

Answered by nidanagi99
0

Answer:

The uncertainty is just too small to be noticed. While the uncertainty principle applies to anything, it's only noticeable for very microscopic particles. In the physics of subatomic particles, it's an often crucial fact that we can't know both the position and the momentum of a particle

Explanation:

Answered by kingofclashofclans62
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Heisenberg's uncertainty principle states that the momentum and precision of a particle cannot be simultaneously measured with arbitrarily high precision.

This is not something can that be put on the innacuracy of the measurement instruments, nor on the quality of the experimental methods; the uncertainty comes from the wave properties inherent in the quantum world.

Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle Formula

Quantum mechanics is the discipline of measurements on the minuscule scale. That measurements are in macro and micro physics can lead to very diverse consequences. Heisenberg uncertainty principle or basically uncertainty principle is a vital concept in Quantum mechanics. Uncertainty principle says that both position and momentum of a particle cannot be determined at the same time and accurately. The result of position and momentum is at all times greater than h/4π.

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