No, no measurement we can ever do will be entirely free of uncertainties. In some measurements the uncertainties might be negligible however. In any best precise & accurate measurement there will be minimum uncertainty equal to h/2pie, that's in accordance to Heisenberg's uncertainty principle.
Your weight is the gravitational attraction force between you and the Earth and not a property of mechanical equilibrium. Mechanical equilibrium is a state in which a momentum coordinate of a particle, rigid body, or dynamical system is conserved.
eigenstate(quantum mechanics) A dynamical state whose state vector (or wave function) is an eigenvector (or eigenfunction) of an operator corresponding to a specified physical quantity. energy state.Refer to: http://www.answers.com/eigenstate?cat=technology&gwp=11&method=3&ver=2.3.0.609
Of any particle. To be precise, the Uncertainty Principle says that the more accurate you know the position of a particle, the less accurately you know the momentum (mass x velocity). The product of the two uncertainties can't go below a certain value.
The uncertainty of a measuring instrument is estimated as plus or minus (±) half the smallest scale division. For a thermometer with a mark at every 1.0°C, the uncertainty is ± 0.5°C. This means that if a student reads a value from this thermometer as 24.0°C, they could give the result as 24.0°C ± 0.5°C
Dynamical Theory of Crystal Lattices has 432 pages.
See What_is_the_difference_between_dynamical_and_dynamic
Dynamical Theory of Crystal Lattices was created on 2007-08-30.
Life is full of uncertainties. We have no plans, the uncertainties are part of the fun.
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It would be this uncertainty or, if more than one, these uncertainties..
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