The heisenberg uncertainty principle is what you are thinking of. However, the relation you asked about does not exist. Most formalisms claim it as (uncertainty of position)(uncertainty of momentum) >= hbar/2. There is a somewhat more obscure and less useful relation (uncertainty of time)(uncertainty of energy) >= hbar/2. But in this relation the term of uncertainty of time is not so straightforward (but it does have an interesting meaning).
In any measurement, the product of the uncertainty in position of an object and the uncertainty in its momentum, can never be less than Planck's Constant (actually h divided by 4 pi, but this gives an order of magnitude of this law). It is important to note that this uncertainty is NOT because we lack good enough instrumentation or we are not clever enough to reduce the uncertainty, it is an inherent uncertainty in the ACTUAL position and momentum of the object.
Add up the relative uncertainties of both constant and of the divider
Werner Heisenberg's (1901-1976) uncertainty principle: ∆x∙ ∆(mv) ≥ h / 4π x = uncertainty; m = mass; v = velocity To solve for ∆x... ∆x = h / 4πm∆v
Suspence
There are three types of uncertainty when owning or managing a small business. The three types of uncertainty are state uncertainty, effect uncertainty and response uncertainty.
There are several ways to calculate uncertainty. You can round a decimal place to the same place as an uncertainty, put the uncertainty in proper form, or calculate uncertainty from a measurement.
Uncertainty is not being sure of something.
That is a statement of a fixed length. There is no uncertainty about that.
Your uncertainty is evident.
The heisenberg uncertainty principle is what you are thinking of. However, the relation you asked about does not exist. Most formalisms claim it as (uncertainty of position)(uncertainty of momentum) >= hbar/2. There is a somewhat more obscure and less useful relation (uncertainty of time)(uncertainty of energy) >= hbar/2. But in this relation the term of uncertainty of time is not so straightforward (but it does have an interesting meaning).
The Age of Uncertainty was created in 1977.
The Age of Uncertainty ended in 1977.
You don't know how much need there is out there for your service or product.
You can measure some aspects of quantum uncertainty.
how an information system can reduce uncertainty
Antonyms for uncertainty are certainty, confidence, security, and sureness.