Question #277d6
1 Answer
Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle states that the position and the velocity of a particle cannot be measured with accuracy and this accuracy decreases as the size of the particle decreases
A formal definition of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle states that the product of the position and momentum uncertainties
That is,
#\mathbf(sigma_(vecx)sigma_(vecp_x) >= ℏ//2)#
(By the way, this happens to hold for any direction, not just the
Mathematically, this is expressed using the following inequality
#color(blue)(ul(color(black)(Deltax * Deltap >= h/(4pi))))#
Here
#Deltax# is the uncertainty in position#Deltap# is the uncertainty in momentum#h# is Planck's constant
The uncertainty in momentum will depend on the mass of the particle,
#color(blue)(ul(color(black)(Deltap = m * Deltav)))#
But first we'll calculate
But since we have been given that the electron velocity is known to be within 10% of 2.2 X 10^6 m/s
Answer B
The uncertainty is higher as the speed of the electron is less in a hydrogen nucleus than the give situation.
The proton also plays a major role in decreasing the uncertainty and this uncertainty is equal to the diameter of the hydrogen