Further
Guy
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Found this interesting article about how the Heisenberg Uncertainty principle has been poorly understood
Anyway, it got me thinking, and there is something that I still am not sure about. According to Heisenberg , which of the following is right?
Lets say I have an electron and am asking where it is (both location and velocity). The possible area is divided in my scenario into 10 portions. So I can say that there is a 10%chance that the electron is in each of those areas. This is odds, as long as all the electron has the same chance of being in each local.
OK, so, is the electron in all 10 locals until it is measured (collapse) or Is the electron in only one of the ten, we simply can't know which?
So I'm not asking about measuring, I'm asking about before we try to measure, what is the fundamental state of the electron? Is it 10% in each local, Is it totally in each local? Is in only in one local but not measurable?
Anyone want to take a shot at answering me, I would dig it.
Anyway, it got me thinking, and there is something that I still am not sure about. According to Heisenberg , which of the following is right?
Lets say I have an electron and am asking where it is (both location and velocity). The possible area is divided in my scenario into 10 portions. So I can say that there is a 10%chance that the electron is in each of those areas. This is odds, as long as all the electron has the same chance of being in each local.
OK, so, is the electron in all 10 locals until it is measured (collapse) or Is the electron in only one of the ten, we simply can't know which?
So I'm not asking about measuring, I'm asking about before we try to measure, what is the fundamental state of the electron? Is it 10% in each local, Is it totally in each local? Is in only in one local but not measurable?
Anyone want to take a shot at answering me, I would dig it.
