Heisenberg's microscope

Heisenberg's microscope is a thought experiment proposed by Werner Heisenberg that has served as the nucleus of some commonly held ideas about quantum mechanics. In particular, it provides an argument for the uncertainty principle on the basis of the principles of classical optics.

The concept was criticized[clarification needed] by Heisenberg's mentor Niels Bohr, and theoretical and experimental developments have suggested that Heisenberg's intuitive explanation[clarification needed] of his mathematical result might be misleading.[1][2] While the act of measurement does lead to uncertainty, the loss of precision is less than that predicted by Heisenberg's argument when measured at the level of an individual state. The formal mathematical result remains valid, however, and the original intuitive argument has also been vindicated mathematically when the notion of disturbance[clarification needed] is expanded to be independent of any specific state.[3][4]

  1. ^ Lee A. Rozema; et al. (6 Sep 2012). "Violation of Heisenberg's Measurement-Disturbance Relationship by Weak Measurements". Phys. Rev. Lett. 109 (18): 100404. arXiv:1208.0034. Bibcode:2012PhRvL.109j0404R. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.109.100404. PMID 23005268. S2CID 37576344.
  2. ^ "Scientists cast doubt on Heisenberg's uncertainty principle". Science Daily. 7 Sep 2012.
  3. ^ Paul Busch; Pekka Lahti; Richard Werner (Oct 2013). "Proof of Heisenberg's error-disturbance relation". Physical Review Letters. 111 (16): 160405. arXiv:1306.1565. Bibcode:2013PhRvL.111p0405B. doi:10.1103/PhysRevLett.111.160405. PMID 24182239. S2CID 24507489.
  4. ^ Lett, Caron (17 Oct 2013). "Scientists prove Heisenberg's intuition correct". University of York.

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