How does a picture look of an object who's location at snap time is uncertain?
- From: "guskz@xxxxxxxxxxx" <guskz@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 30 Jun 2007 05:57:21 -0700
Double slit experiment specifies about the Uncertainty
principle....yet....
.....when they pictures at there synchrotron test labs and others....
....how does the picture of a single electron look like considering
that it's position is uncertain at the time the picture is taken.
Since they've even taken pictures I believe of much much smaller
quarks, pions, therefore a picture of an electron should be easier to
take?
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Prev by Date: Re: If position and time is uncertain then how do they know electron/photon occupy both simultaneously?
- Next by Date: Re: How do we measure the energy of this light wave?
- Previous by thread: Proper quantities in SR
- Next by thread: Re: How does a picture look of an object who's location at snap time is uncertain?
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|
|