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14.10 The Heisenberg uncertainty principle

Before starting this section it might be advisable to refresh your understanding of how sinusoidal signals can be superimposed to generate complex waveforms by looking again at some of the simulations in Section 13.15.

To help you understand the issues involved in this section run the PhET interactive simulation once again and select the Discrete to Continuous tab. Check all three boxes to display Continuous waveform, x-space envelope and width indicators. Vary the width of the wave packet over the range 1 to 4p and observe how the widths of the amplitude wave packet (sk — proportional to Dp) and the x-space wave packet (sx — proportional to Dx) vary as a result.

The ActivPhysics OnLine interactive exercise  illustratesd the Uncertainty Principle and how the properties of a wave packet (specifically, Dk.Dx ≥ ½), as described in Section 13.15 of Understanding Physics, relate to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.

For historical and other details see the Wikipedia entry on the .

Understanding Physics

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Mansfield and O'Sullivan, Understanding Physics, 3rd ed., John Wiley & Sons, Chichester (2020),

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