Its central principle in QM shows that science never
goes away from uncertainty. Or why do they believe
the principle of uncertainty of measurement?
Mitchell Raemsch
Its central principle in QM shows that science never
goes away from uncertainty. Or why do they believe
the principle of uncertainty of measurement?
Mitchell Raemsch
On 21-July-23 11:38 am, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
Its central principle in QM shows that science never
goes away from uncertainty. Or why do they believe
the principle of uncertainty of measurement?
Mitchell RaemschThat, of course, is a mischaracterise of what QM says. There is no fundamental limit on how accurately you can measure a particular
quantity. Instead there is a limit on how accurately you can
simultaneously measure a particular quantity and its conjugate. Further,
QM is not saying this is a limitation on the process of measurement
itself, but rather that the two values do not simultaneously exist
beyond that limit of precision. That is, you cannot measure it more accurately, because it's not there to be measured.
Sylvia.
On Thursday, July 20, 2023 at 11:20:48 PM UTC-5, Sylvia Else wrote:is 940MeV and muon is 105MeV. Now if we multiply 9 times 105 we end up with 945, and the Sigma Error for neutron is 945/940 = 1.005 for an error of 0.5%. And in Physics we define Sigma Error as being 0.5% or less as being equal.
On 21-July-23 11:38 am, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
Its central principle in QM shows that science never
goes away from uncertainty. Or why do they believe
the principle of uncertainty of measurement?
Mitchell RaemschThat, of course, is a mischaracterise of what QM says. There is no fundamental limit on how accurately you can measure a particular
quantity. Instead there is a limit on how accurately you can simultaneously measure a particular quantity and its conjugate. Further, QM is not saying this is a limitation on the process of measurement itself, but rather that the two values do not simultaneously exist
beyond that limit of precision. That is, you cannot measure it more accurately, because it's not there to be measured.
Sylvia.Well, let us state the Uncertainty Principle in a far better manner, to get all the blemishes and philosophy out of it, so that the common layperson like MitchR cannot trip all over himself.
We have Sigma Error in physics, which simply means in experiments we get close to some convergent point. The classic example is that the Muon is the true electron of Atoms because we see in the Old Physics the proton rest mass is 938 MeV while neutron
Meaning, that the Neutron, and proton are so close to 945, that those are actually nine muons. And we further analyze this to mean that the true electron is the muon with the true proton is a 840MeV torus of coils with muon inside thrusting throughdoing the Faraday law. This means the stars and our Sun shine not from fusion, but the Faraday law going on inside each and every proton inside the Sun or stars.
Now, getting back to Uncertainty Principle, you can start in the microscope scale and talk about one conjugate variable affecting the other, and thus you cannot measure both with exacting precision.instruments are electromagnetic and skew the reading to 940MeV.
Or, well, you can see Uncertainty Principle in the Macroscale of physical reality. That as we measure the rest mass of neutron and we come up with 940MeV when in reality it is exactly 945MeV and muon is exactly 105MeV and dividing is exactly 9.
In both directions, we have error-- error in microscopic as position affects momentum and error in macroscopic as we use the entire rest of the background to measure the rest mass of neutron and it does not come out to be 945MeV exactly, because our
So I prefer to teach the Uncertainty Principle in both the microscopic and the macroscopic. When we teach Uncertainty Principle UP in only microscopic we end up with the majority of fools, of laypersons waxing away philosophically. When we teach UP assigma error and that the entire background noise of the Universe has its tiny thumb into the measuring of neutron as 940MeV when it is truly 945MeV along with muon exactly being 105MeV. When that layperson fool begins to understand the Macroscopic notion
Uncertainty Principle has both a macroscopic and microscopic view, and when we teach both, it eliminates much of that nauseating philosophy by weak minds.The Light wave is a closed loop circuit, a pencil ellipse. And if Feynman had realized Light Waves are circuits (which easily explains quantum entanglement), if Feynman had realized Light Waves are circuits-- those thin, extremely thin pencil ellipses,
P.S. Uncertainty is usually taught by Feynman's double slit experiment. Which is a horrible way of teaching Uncertainty and only adds to the philosophy b.s. For Feynman made a mistake. The light wave is not a straight arrow ray with a head and tail.
Its central principle in QM shows that science never
goes away from uncertainty. Or why do they believe
the principle of uncertainty of measurement?
Mitchell Raemsch
Now, today I am going to explore the idea that the Planck's constant both 4.135*10^-15 eV*Hz^-1 and 6.582*10^-16 eV*s are directly related to the shape and geometry of a Pencil Ellipse Closed Loop Circuit of any given Light Wave.
On Thursday, July 20, 2023 at 6:38:45 PM UTC-7, mitchr...@gmail.com wrote:
Its central principle in QM shows that science never
goes away from uncertainty. Or why do they believe
the principle of uncertainty of measurement?
Mitchell Raemsch
Why did they find uncertainty as their central science principle?
I think there is a direct link of Planck's constant with a pencil ellipse
On Friday, July 21, 2023 at 2:45:32 PM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
Now, today I am going to explore the idea that the Planck's constant both 4.135*10^-15 eV*Hz^-1 and 6.582*10^-16 eV*s are directly related to the shape and geometry of a Pencil Ellipse Closed Loop Circuit of any given Light Wave.
In physics it is E = h*freq in math it is eccentricity of ellipse e=c/a where c = sqrt(a^2-b^2) for ellipse formula of x^2/a^2 + y^2/b^2 = 1. In other words, physics energy of wave is a pencil ellipse.
On Friday, July 21, 2023 at 4:18:31 PM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
I think there is a direct link of Planck's constant with a pencil ellipse On Friday, July 21, 2023 at 2:45:32 PM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
Now, today I am going to explore the idea that the Planck's constant both 4.135*10^-15 eV*Hz^-1 and 6.582*10^-16 eV*s are directly related to the shape and geometry of a Pencil Ellipse Closed Loop Circuit of any given Light Wave.
On Friday, July 21, 2023 at 7:24:42 PM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:be defined only from "internal parts of the ellipse". So confusing to youngsters, but math professors are never prone to dispelling confusion rather they keep piling on more confusion.
In physics it is E = h*freq in math it is eccentricity of ellipse e=c/a where c = sqrt(a^2-b^2) for ellipse formula of x^2/a^2 + y^2/b^2 = 1. In other words, physics energy of wave is a pencil ellipse.
On Friday, July 21, 2023 at 4:18:31 PM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
I think there is a direct link of Planck's constant with a pencil ellipse
On Friday, July 21, 2023 at 2:45:32 PM UTC-5, Archimedes Plutonium wrote:
Now, today I am going to explore the idea that the Planck's constant both 4.135*10^-15 eV*Hz^-1 and 6.582*10^-16 eV*s are directly related to the shape and geometry of a Pencil Ellipse Closed Loop Circuit of any given Light Wave.
Alright so we have in physics E = h*freq, and in math we have eccentricity of ellipse = distance from center to foci / semimajor axis. Sad,sad indeed that math geometry has external artifices the directrix to define ellipse eccentricity when it should
Never use a directrix in defining ellipse eccentricity, simply use just internal parts of the ellipse.
So we have eccentricity = c/a where c is distance from center to a foci. And a is semimajor axis.
So in physics we have Energy = h*freq and in geometry math we have Eccentricity = c/a, and we make that be c = E*a. So is eccentricity the Planck's constant?
A Pencil Ellipse is a ellipse eccentricity of 0.999 or more nines, for eccentricity of 1 is a straightline segment.
Alright, there is a physics application of Directrix for a parabola, such as a ball in motion described by a parabola the directrix is the energy.
But there is no application of directrix of ellipse for physics, as far as I know. When there is no application, then it is best to drop directrix in teaching the ellipse.
AP
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