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Observer effect and principle of uncertainty

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Are there any scientists tried to relate the two, in hypothesis and calculations?

1 hour ago, Courage said:

Are there any scientists tried to relate the two, in hypothesis and calculations?

There is no connection between them.

The uncertainty principle is about a limit to which things can be measured, even without any effect from the observer.

  • 3 weeks later...

The Uncertainty Principle is a side effect from repeated requests to make the QM object real/physical.

It's a delay/smear from the system not being able to process quick enough. Swapping from wave to particle is apparently taxing, especially if it has to do it to each observable event (frame/timeline), for momentum.

The double slit shows us that a particle can be requested to decohere and remain decohered until it hits the detector.

The Uncertainty Principle test requires several requests of decoherence to get the momentum.

What's newly discovered is that each request is causing the particle to cycle from wave to particle, setting fuzziness because it wasn't fast enough to do the swap.

15 minutes ago, scifimath said:

The Uncertainty Principle is a side effect from repeated requests to make the QM object real/physical.

!

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Do not bring up your pet theory outside of its own thread in speculations 

 

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