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What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?

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    The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle
    is one of a handful of ideas
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    from quantum physics to
    expand into general pop culture.
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    It says that you can never simultaneously
    know the exact position
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    and the exact speed of an object
    and shows up as a metaphor in everything
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    from literary criticism
    to sports commentary.
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    Uncertainty is often explained as a result
    of measurement,
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    that the act of measuring an object's
    position changes its speed, or vice versa.
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    The real origin is much deeper
    and more amazing.
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    The Uncertainty Principle exists
    because everything in the universe
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    behaves like both a particle and a wave
    at the same time.
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    In quantum mechanics, the exact position
    and exact speed of an object
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    have no meaning.
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    To understand this,
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    we need to think about what it means
    to behave like a particle or a wave.
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    Particles, by definition, exist in
    a single place at any instant in time.
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    We can represent this by a graph
    showing the probability of finding
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    the object at a particular place,
    which looks like a spike,
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    100% at one specific position,
    and zero everywhere else.
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    Waves, on the other hand,
    are disturbances spread out in space,
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    like ripples covering
    the surface of a pond.
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    We can clearly identify features
    of the wave pattern as a whole,
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    most importantly, its wavelength,
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    which is the distance between two
    neighboring peaks,
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    or two neighboring valleys.
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    But we can't assign it a single position.
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    It has a good probability of
    being in lots of different places.
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    Wavelength is essential for
    quantum physics
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    because an object's wavelength
    is related to its momentum,
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    mass times velocity.
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    A fast-moving object has lots of momentum,
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    which corresponds to
    a very short wavelength.
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    A heavy object has lots of momentum
    even if it's not moving very fast,
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    which again means a very short wavelength.
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    This is why we don't notice
    the wave nature of everyday objects.
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    If you toss a baseball up in the air,
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    its wavelength is a billionth of a
    trillionth of a trillionth of a meter,
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    far too tiny to ever detect.
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    Small things,
    like atoms or electrons though,
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    can have wavelengths big enough
    to measure in physics experiments.
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    So, if we have a pure wave,
    we can measure its wavelength,
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    and thus its momentum,
    but it has no position.
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    We can know a particles position
    very well,
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    but it doesn't have a wavelength,
    so we don't know its momentum.
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    To get a particle with both position
    and momentum,
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    we need to mix the two pictures
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    to make a graph that has waves,
    but only in a small area.
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    How can we do this?
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    By combining waves
    with different wavelengths,
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    which means giving our quantum object some
    possibility of having different momenta.
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    When we add two waves,
    we find that there are places
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    where the peaks line up,
    making a bigger wave,
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    and other places where the peaks of one
    fill in the valleys of the other.
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    The result has regions where
    we see waves
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    separated by regions of nothing at all.
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    If we add a third wave,
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    the regions where the waves cancel out
    get bigger,
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    a fourth and they get bigger still,
    with the wavier regions becoming narrower.
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    If we keep adding waves,
    we can make a wave packet
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    with a clear wavelength
    in one small region.
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    That's a quantum object with both
    wave and particle nature,
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    but to accomplish this,
    we had to lose certainty
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    about both position and momentum.
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    The positions isn't restricted
    to a single point.
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    There's a good probability
    of finding it within some range
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    of the center of the wave packet,
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    and we made the wave packet
    by adding lots of waves,
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    which means there's
    some probability of finding it
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    with the momentum corresponding
    to any one of those.
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    Both position and momentum
    are now uncertain,
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    and the uncertainties are connected.
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    If you want to reduce
    the position uncertainty
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    by making a smaller wave packet,
    you need to add more waves,
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    which means a bigger momentum uncertainty.
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    If you want to know the momentum better,
    you need a bigger wave packet,
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    which means a bigger position uncertainty.
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    That's the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle,
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    first stated by German physicist
    Werner Heisenberg back in 1927.
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    This uncertainty isn't a matter
    of measuring well or badly,
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    but an inevitable result
    of combining particle and wave nature.
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    The Uncertainty Principle isn't just
    a practical limit on measurment.
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    It's a limit on what properties
    an object can have,
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    built into the fundamental structure
    of the universe itself.
Title:
What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?
Speaker:
Chad Orzel
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:44

English subtitles

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