@fermilab
  @fermilab
Fermilab | Demystifying the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle @fermilab | Uploaded 11 months ago | Updated 1 hour ago
The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle is one of the most non-intuitive concepts in all of quantum mechanics. It says that it is impossible to precisely know both an object's location and its motion. Know one well and you must know the other poorly. The origins of this are deeply tied to the wave nature of matter and the connection between waves and momentum. In this video, Fermilab’s Dr. Don Lincoln sorts it all out.

Fourier transform square wave:
mathworld.wolfram.com/FourierSeriesSquareWave.html

Fourier transform gaussian:
mathworld.wolfram.com/FourierTransformGaussian.html

Additional Fourier transform explainer:
mriquestions.com/fourier-transform-ft.html

Wavelength, momentum, and wave number:
http://faculty.chas.uni.edu/~shand/Mod_Phys_Lecture_Notes/Chap6_Matter_Waves_Notes_s12.pdf

Wave Function video:
youtube.com/watch?v=K0VY9_hB_WU

Deriving Heisenberg:
http://math.uchicago.edu/~may/REU2021/REUPapers/Dubey.pdf

Fermilab physics 101:
fnal.gov/pub/science/particle-physics-101/index.html

Fermilab home page:
fnal.gov
Demystifying the Heisenberg Uncertainty PrincipleBig Questions: The Ultimate Building Blocks of Matter22 Subatomic Stories: Why dark matter seems likelyWhat is the ideal temperature for a quantum computer?26 Subatomic Stories: How the Big Bang really happenedHow do we know neutrinos exist? #shorts8 Subatomic Stories: The amazing Higgs bosonThe solar neutrino problem | Even Bananas 08Quantum mechanics and the double slit experimentTwin paradox: the real explanation (no math)Press Conference: First results from the Muon g-2 experiment at FermilabIntroducing the Quantum Garage at the SQMS Center

Demystifying the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle @fermilab

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER