Werner Heisenberg published this principle in 1927.
According to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle if the position of a moving particle is known velocity is the other quantity that cannot be known. Heisenberg uncertainty principle states that the impossibility of knowing both velocity and position of a moving particle at the same time.
The minimum kinetic energy that can be calculated according to the uncertainty principle is known as the zero-point energy.
Werner Heisenberg developed this principle, known as the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle.
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).
According to the Heisenberg uncertainty principle if the position of a moving particle is known velocity is the other quantity that cannot be known. Heisenberg uncertainty principle states that the impossibility of knowing both velocity and position of a moving particle at the same time.
The equation of uncertainty principle is ΔxΔp≥ℏ.
Also referred to as the 'uncertainty' principle, it is a principle in quantum mechanics holding that increasing the accuracy of measurement of one observable quantity increases the uncertainty with which another conjugate quantity may be known.
Uncertainty
Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle states that the more precisely we know the position of a particle (like an electron), the less precisely we can know its momentum and vice versa. This uncertainty arises from the wave-particle duality of quantum mechanics.
Uncertainty Principle - 2010 I was released on: USA: January 2010
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle affects the behaviour of orbitals.
Since it is called "the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle" it is neither a scientific law nor a theory. It is a principle.