Why is Planck's Constant important?

1 Answer
Jun 6, 2017

Planck's constant is instrumental and an unavoidable constant which appears in quantum mechanics.

Explanation:

Even though it was first introduced in the Planck's law,

u_(lamda)d(lamda) = (8pihc)/lamda^5*(dlamda)/(e^((hc)/(lamdakT))-1)

Where one quantum of radiation would have an energy, E = (hc)/(lamda), the concept of quantized radiation was extended by Einstein, later by Bohr in their theories as a part of the old quantum theory.

Today almost all important relationships in quantum mechanics, contain Planck's constant (or the reduced Planck's constant h/(2pi)).

Examples would include,

1) de Broglie relation -
lamda = h/p

2) Schrodinger equation -

(ih)/(2pi)(delpsi)/(delt) = -(h^2)/(8pi^2m)(nabla)^2psi + V(vec r,t)psi

3) Commutator of x and p_x -

[x,p_x] = (ih)/(2pi)

And so on.

It is to quantum mechanics, what the constants epsilon_0 and mu_0 are to Electricity and Magnetism.