Proof Mooted For Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle
ananyo writes "Encapsulating the strangeness of quantum mechanics is a single mathematical expression. According to every undergraduate physics textbook, the uncertainty principle states that it is impossible to simultaneously know the exact position and momentum of a subatomic particle — the more precisely one knows the particle's position at a given moment, the less precisely one can know the value of its momentum. But the original version of the principle, put forward by physicist Werner Heisenberg in 1927, couches quantum indeterminism in a different way — as a fundamental limit to how well a detector can measure quantum properties. Heisenberg offered no direct proof for this version of his principle. Now researchers say they have such a proof. (Pre-print available at the arXiv.) If they're right, it would put the measurement aspect of the uncertainty principle on solid ground — something that researchers had started to question — but it would also suggest that quantum-encrypted messages can be transmitted securely."
The whole "perfect is the enemy of the good argument" (which I can follow, to a point), has devolved into "Hey, it may be a crap sandwich, but rejoice in the bread."
This mooting/affirmation opens the door, lets out the cat, and affords Congress the ability to say: "Our idiocy is a Heisenberg reference!"
My day is made, and it's not 0600.
Get thee glass eyes, and, like a scurvy politician, seem to see things thou dost not.--King Lear