According to the Uncertainty Principle, certain physical properties cannot be simultaneously and precisely determined. Such properties include momentum or position. In general the more precisely one property of one system is known, the less precisely the other property of the same system is. It can be interpreted in two different way. One of them states that it is simply impossible to determine (measure) those two properties at the same time. The other one states that it is simply because of the nature of the system itself.
Since it is called "the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle" it is neither a scientific law nor a theory. It is a principle.
The uncertainty principle is a theory that the more you know about the speed of an electron, the less you know about its position and vica versa
Jaume Gil Aluja has written: 'Elements for a theory of decision in uncertainty' -- subject(s): Uncertainty, Decision making
Jeffrey A. Worm has written: 'Measuring uncertainty by extracting fuzzy rules using rough sets' -- subject(s): Uncertainty (Information theory)
Peter Haddawy has written: 'Representing plans under uncertainty' -- subject(s): Uncertainty (Information theory), Decision making, Artificial intelligence
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M. Christine Wilson has written: 'On certain information-theoretic concepts in the theory of graphs' -- subject(s): Graph theory, Uncertainty (Information theory)
Werner Heisenberg proposed in 1927 the uncertainty principle.
The most important contribution of Werner Heisenberg was the discovery of the uncertainty principle.
David C. Cassidy has written: 'Einstein and our world' -- subject(s): Physicists, Relativity (Physics), Quantum theory, Intellectual life, Influence, Biography 'Werner Heisenberg and the crisis in quantum theory, 1920-1925' -- subject(s): History, Quantum theory, Physics 'Uncertainty' -- subject(s): History, Quantum theory, Physics, Physicists, Biography 'Uncertainty -Op/124'
JOHANNES WILLEM BERTENS has written: 'LITERARY THEORY: THE BASICS'
Paul. Krause has written: 'Representing uncertain knowledge' -- subject(s): Artificial intelligence, Knowledge representation (Information theory), Uncertainty (Information theory)