Spectator N0. 2679 : Choc-A-Block By Doc
Crosswords1 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.So, fo3nix, you reference Planck's Constant as a neccessary component of quanta investigation. Turns out, as explained by Max Planck in 1900, that E = hν. The value of h is described thusly h = 6.626068 10�34 joule-sec. You would agree this is a very small number. In his now legendary investigation into black-body radiation Planck also derived Planck's Length and Planck's Mass (I cannot, due to limitations in this site, produce the equations). Inherent in each equation is the term c. I think this is a reference to the speed of light, is it not? Simply stated an inherent in Quantum Mechanics is that the position of an object can only be determined (due to the Heisenberg Uncertaintity Principle) at a distance equal to Planck's Length. Meaning it would be impossible to distinguish a speed of zero (at rest) from a speed of 22.89 m/s (75.09843 ft/s. I probably should have more accurately said at the speed of light, since it is a requirement for any of Planck's definitions and hence, any discovery of the quantum mechanical affects... In my opinion...