The Uncertainty Principal, which states that we cannot know the momentum AND position of an electron at the same time. The consequences of this are quite vast; by looking at something, we are actually changing its result.
He didn't. Credit for quantum mechanics goes to Max Plank
Heisenberg, Dirac and Schrodinger all made large combinations. Schrodinger is famous for his wave mechanics, Heisenberg for his matrix notation. Dirac realised that the theories of Heisenberg and Schrodinger were essentially the same. He also created the Dirac equation, an important step in the creation of a relativistic version of Quantum Mechanics.
The German scientist Werner Heisenberg developed his uncertainty principle, a major concept in quantum mechanics, in 1927.
They both describe the nature of the wave/particle duality They also both point to the uncertainty of quantum mechanics
actually einstein developed one of the earliest parts of quantum mechanics: the theory of the photoelectric effect. he worked directly with many of the scientists that later developed the complete theory of quantum mechanics and the mathematics to solve its apparent paradoxes to get usable predictions from the theory. later he rejected it due to it being nondeterministic, not because he didn't understand quantum mechanics but because he did understand quantum mechanics. he then tried to combine quantum mechanics and general relativity, hoping the resulting unified field theory would resolve the nondeterminism of quantum mechanics, resulting in a single fully deterministic theory of everything.
Werner Heisenberg is considered the creator of quantum mechanics in 1925.
He didn't. Credit for quantum mechanics goes to Max Plank
They were two co-founders of quantum mechanics
Heisenberg, Dirac and Schrodinger all made large combinations. Schrodinger is famous for his wave mechanics, Heisenberg for his matrix notation. Dirac realised that the theories of Heisenberg and Schrodinger were essentially the same. He also created the Dirac equation, an important step in the creation of a relativistic version of Quantum Mechanics.
The German scientist Werner Heisenberg developed his uncertainty principle, a major concept in quantum mechanics, in 1927.
Schrödinger and Heisenberg are known to be two of the important founders of quantum mechanics. They both invented a mathematical formalism for quantum mechanics. Schrodinger's formalism which was based on the wave equation was the most popular one. Heisenberg's formalism was based on the notion of quantum jumps (the innate "randomness" of sub-atomic physics the very reason that the famous "Schrodinger's cat" is not alive or dead...). Heisenberg's formalism was innovative but more difficult to handle. The difference on the formalism reflects their different views on the interpretation of quantum mechanics; Schrondinger was more a realist and he was sharing Einstein view that randomness is not desirable in the description of sub-atomic physics. Heisenberg on the other hand was more a supporter of the Copenhagen Interpretation of quantum mechanics which interprets the sub-atomic randomness as an innate characteristic of the sub-atomic world and the very heart of quantum physics theory.
Perhaps you mean Heisenberg. One of the founders of quantum mechanics, and active in mathematics, and perhaps most well-known for the 'Uncertainty Principle'.
They both describe the nature of the wave/particle duality They also both point to the uncertainty of quantum mechanics
Answer: The Heisenberg uncertainty principle is a fundamental part of quantum mechanics so chance is prerequisite to everything.
Werner Heisenberg was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1935 for physics because he founded the creation of quantum mechanics. This is a theory that everything is constantly in motion even though we may not be able to see it.
The Nobel Prize in Physics 1932 was awarded to Werner Heisenberg for the creation of quantum mechanics, the application of which has, inter alia, led to the discovery of the allotropic forms of hydrogen.
Werner Heisenberg. Born in Munich, Germany in 1901 and died in 1976. Heisenberg examined features of qauntum mechanics that was absent in classical mechanics. Thus created the "Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle".