Re: How can a particle be in a superposition of states of different energies
- From: "Autymn D. C." <lysdexia@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: 22 Nov 2006 03:03:45 -0800
souvik1982@xxxxxxxxx wrote:
determined. Is this true? Shouldn't the energy, like charge, be a
unique property of any particle?
If it is measured, energy or momentum becomes a unique property for the
particle at the expense of losing information about its position which
gets "spread out" over a range of values.
I disagree with this. The Planckian condition is satisfied; one does
not lose information or precision as that is the relevant description
of the body.
The superposition means that the body isn't picky, because someone
didn't set it for one state over another. In other words, the observer
doesn't know what the next state is.
-Aut
.
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