A paradox about Heisneberg Uncertainty ?

In summary, the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle (HUP) states that it is not possible to measure the position and momentum of a particle simultaneously with arbitrary precision. This is due to the fact that the act of measuring one observable (such as position) will inevitably alter the other observable (momentum). This paradox highlights the limitations of our ability to make predictions in quantum mechanics and the fundamental uncertainty inherent in the nature of particles. While it is possible to measure both position and momentum with high accuracy, the results cannot be used to make predictions as the act of measurement disturbs the system. This is in line with Heisenberg's statement that the HUP does not apply to the past, as the measurement alters the system and makes it impossible
  • #1
Klaus_Hoffmann
86
1
a paradox about Heisneberg Uncertainty ??

Let be a particle, we measure the position at time 't' [tex] x(t) [/tex]

We measure the position after an infinitesimal chnage t-->t+dt so [tex] x(t+dt) [/tex] is obtained.

then as an approximation we can make (definition of derivative and velocity)

[tex] x(t+dt)-x(t)=dtp(t) [/tex] so we can obtain the momentum at time 't' [tex] p(t) [/tex] avoiding uncertainty
 
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  • #2
Where is the paradox? You now know the average velocity between t and t+ dt. You do NOT know the velocity before t because in measuring the postion you have changed the velocity when you measured the postion. You do NOT know the velocity after t+ dt because you changed the velocity when you measured the position. The average velocity you have contains no useful information.
 
  • #3
Klaus_Hoffmann said:
Let be a particle, we measure the position at time 't' [tex] x(t) [/tex]

We measure the position after an infinitesimal chnage t-->t+dt so [tex] x(t+dt) [/tex] is obtained.

then as an approximation we can make (definition of derivative and velocity)

[tex] x(t+dt)-x(t)=dtp(t) [/tex] so we can obtain the momentum at time 't' [tex] p(t) [/tex] avoiding uncertainty

The HUP says nothing about the measurement of a single observable. you can measure the position and momentum of one particle as accurately as you are capable of.

The HUP comes in when you make the NEXT AND SUBSEQUENT x(t) and x(t+dt) measurements. The p(t) that you measure will depend very much on how well you measured x(t). The more certain you are of x(t), the larger a range of values you will measure for x(t+dt), which will result in a larger range of p(t) values. This will occur even if you have an identical initial conditions and you simply repeat the identical experiment. This is the HUP.

Zz.
 
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  • #4
Incidentally, in relativistic quantum mechanics, if you carry out the procedure you described, you're guaranteed to measure the particle traveling at an average velocity of c. This is becausen the momentum is uniformly distributed after the first measurement of position, and so "most" of the possible states lie at very high momenta, whose cooresponding velocities all approach the speed of light.
 
  • #5
Klaus_Hoffmann said:
Let be a particle, we measure the position at time 't' [tex] x(t) [/tex]

We measure the position after an infinitesimal chnage t-->t+dt so [tex] x(t+dt) [/tex] is obtained.

then as an approximation we can make (definition of derivative and velocity)

[tex] x(t+dt)-x(t)=dtp(t) [/tex] so we can obtain the momentum at time 't' [tex] p(t) [/tex] avoiding uncertainty

Yes, but the key point is that the HUP syas something about the spread of values in the observables. It does not say anything about a single measurement.

The whole point is that if you start with a second particle with exactly the same quantum state (same wavefunction) and you repeat exactly the procedure you just described, you will get a completely different result, in general. That's the key point. In classical physics, of course, one would get reproducible results (the same conditions will yield the same results, within th euncertainty of the measurements performed, which may in principle be reduced without any limit). In QM, repeating the same experiment to the same quantum system will yield different results every time, in general. The spread of the values in position and momenta will satisfy the HUP.
 
  • #6
then you mean that there's also some uncertainty involving

[x(t),x(t+dt)]=ih where [] is the commutator
 
  • #7
Klaus_Hoffmann said:
then you mean that there's also some uncertainty involving

[x(t),x(t+dt)]=ih where [] is the commutator


Well, I don't think it is possible to express it this way because I don't see what would be the meaning of putting them in the order x(t) x(t+dt). What would that mean?

What I *am* saying is that the value of x(t+dt) is not uniquely defined even for a given x(t) and a specific initial wavefunction.

But to get to the uusal form of the HUP with x and p_x andto relate this to a comutator [x,p], the value of "p" must be obtained by different means, by using momentum conservation in a collision, say. That's at least my understanding, maybe others will have some clarifying comments to make.

regards
 
  • #8
Klaus_Hoffmann said:
Let be a particle, we measure the position at time 't' [tex] x(t) [/tex]

We measure the position after an infinitesimal chnage t-->t+dt so [tex] x(t+dt) [/tex] is obtained.

then as an approximation we can make (definition of derivative and velocity)

[tex] x(t+dt)-x(t)=dtp(t) [/tex] so we can obtain the momentum at time 't' [tex] p(t) [/tex] avoiding uncertainty

There is no dificulty in finding both position and momentum of a particle with any accuracy you like. The problem is that you cannot use the result to make predictions, because the measurement alters the system. As Heisenberg said, HUP does not apply to the past.
 
  • #9
Klaus_Hoffmann said:
then you mean that there's also some uncertainty involving

[x(t),x(t+dt)]=ih where [] is the commutator

I think that this conclusion is basically correct, although the actual form of the commutator is different. The operator x(t) is connected to x(t=0) = x by the time evolution equation

[tex] x(t) = e^{\frac{i}{\hbar}Ht} x e^{-\frac{i}{\hbar}Ht} [/tex]

where H is the Hamiltonian whose commutator with x is [itex] [x,H] = i \hbar v [/itex], where v = p/m is the operator of velocity. (I assumed that there are no interactions.) Using this commutator one can obtain, as expected

[tex] x(t) = x + vt[/tex]

so that

[tex] [x(0), x(t)] = [x, v]t = \frac{i t \hbar}{m} [/tex]

Eugene.
 
  • #10
ueit said:
There is no dificulty in finding both position and momentum of a particle with any accuracy you like. The problem is that you cannot use the result to make predictions, because the measurement alters the system. As Heisenberg said, HUP does not apply to the past.
Can you please explain this better? HUP is often expressed saying: "it's not possible to measure x and p simultaneously with arbitrary accuracy".
 
  • #11
You can measure only one varaible at a time to any degree of accuracy. IF you get an accurate measurement of momentum, you will have a large uncertainty of position.

A nice metaphor is that the HUP is like taking a photograph of a moving car; you can have a fast shutter speed and accurately measure the position f the car but know little on how fast it was going, if you use a slower shutter speed you can measure the speed via the blur on the photo but have little knowledge on its exact position.
 
  • #12
MarkeD said:
You can measure only one varaible at a time to any degree of accuracy. IF you get an accurate measurement of momentum, you will have a large uncertainty of position.

A nice metaphor is that the HUP is like taking a photograph of a moving car; you can have a fast shutter speed and accurately measure the position f the car but know little on how fast it was going, if you use a slower shutter speed you can measure the speed via the blur on the photo but have little knowledge on its exact position.

Er.. this is not quite right. The problem in your example is that you are using inappropriate method to measure different things. The HUP never say anything about using the SAME technique to measure something.

First of all, there is a sequence of measurement, i.e. you measure position first, and then momentum, or you measure momentum first and then position. Both do not give you the same result because of non-commutation. But more importantly, the HUP, if you look carefully at the expression, requires the knowledge of the AVERAGE values of each of the observable, ie. an ensemble of measurements, not just one. This means that for a single measurement of the position, followed by the single measurement of the momentum, there's nothing that restricts the accuracy of each of those measurements. The accuracy of each of those measurements depends on the accuracy of the instruments, and they are independent of each other. I could use a slit of size [itex]\Delta (x)[/itex] to measure the position and then look at where the particle hit the detector/screen behind the slit to measure the transverse momentum. The size of the slit and the size of the spot on the detector are independent of each other and are not governed by the HUP. Both of these sizes determine the uncertainty of that single measurement of position and single measurement of the momentum. These are not the HUP.

Zz.
 
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  • #13
Klaus_Hoffmann said:
Let be a particle, we measure the position at time 't' [tex] x(t) [/tex]

We measure the position after an infinitesimal chnage t-->t+dt so [tex] x(t+dt) [/tex] is obtained.

then as an approximation we can make (definition of derivative and velocity)

[tex] x(t+dt)-x(t)=dtp(t) [/tex] so we can obtain the momentum at time 't' [tex] p(t) [/tex] avoiding uncertainty

This "paradox" can be posed just as well without the infinitesimal part. Make the first position measurement and then later make the second position measurement. You can make each of these measurements as accurately as you want to and, with the times, you also have the velocity (and momentum) to arbitrary accuracy. The catch is that each position measurement introduces its own momentum uncertainty (the HUP position uncertainty is not the distance between the measurements). The momentum uncertainty introduced by the second measurement is independent of the first measurement.

It is easy to see this with waves and diffraction. If a wave encounters a slit of dimension similar to its wavelength, it will spread out (diffract). If another slit is placed downstream, the small flat portion of the wavefront that encounters the second slit will spread out again. The diffraction at each slit does not depend on what happened previously. [Note that if the slits are large compared with the wavelength, the wave will be collimated, not spread out. That corresponds to the classical limit.]
 
  • #14
lightarrow said:
Can you please explain this better? HUP is often expressed saying: "it's not possible to measure x and p simultaneously with arbitrary accuracy".

This can be also be explained in terms of diffraction at a slit (please see my previous post). The width of the slit is the uncertainty in position lateral to the direction of travel. The angular spread (diffraction width) of the emerging wave is given by the ratio of the wavelength to the slit width. This angle corresponds to the lateral uncertainty of the momentum. So the uncertainties of both the position and momentum are determined "simultaneously" at the slit.
 
  • #15
country boy said:
This can be also be explained in terms of diffraction at a slit (please see my previous post). The width of the slit is the uncertainty in position lateral to the direction of travel. The angular spread (diffraction width) of the emerging wave is given by the ratio of the wavelength to the slit width. This angle corresponds to the lateral uncertainty of the momentum. So the uncertainties of both the position and momentum are determined "simultaneously" at the slit.
Yes, but ( probably my english wasn't very good), I intended to ask ueit to explain his phrase:

"There is no dificulty in finding both position and momentum of a particle with any accuracy you like. "

since it would seem in contradiction with the fact we can't simultaneously measure position and momentum with arbitrary accuracy.
 
  • #16
lightarrow said:
Yes, but ( probably my english wasn't very good), I intended to ask ueit to explain his phrase:

"There is no dificulty in finding both position and momentum of a particle with any accuracy you like. "

since it would seem in contradiction with the fact we can't simultaneously measure position and momentum with arbitrary accuracy.

This is NOT a fact. It is a misunderstanding of the HUP. We can "simultaneously" measure position and momentum with arbitrary accuracy (up to our present-day technology), if by "simultaneous", you mean a single measurement of position, and then followed by a single measurement of the momentum of that particle. The HUP never stated anything about an instantaneous and simultaneous measurement of both position and momentum. If it does, then the order of the commutation relation won't make a difference.

Zz.
 
  • #17
ZapperZ said:
This is NOT a fact. It is a misunderstanding of the HUP. We can "simultaneously" measure position and momentum with arbitrary accuracy (up to our present-day technology), if by "simultaneous", you mean a single measurement of position, and then followed by a single measurement of the momentum of that particle. The HUP never stated anything about an instantaneous and simultaneous measurement of both position and momentum. If it does, then the order of the commutation relation won't make a difference.

Zz.

The way you use term "simultaneous" seems confusing. If you first measure the position, and after it the momentum, then the measurements were not simultaneous.

lightarrow said:
"There is no dificulty in finding both position and momentum of a particle with any accuracy you like. "

since it would seem in contradiction with the fact we can't simultaneously measure position and momentum with arbitrary accuracy.

You can find the position with arbitrary accuracy, and after it you can find the momentum with arbitrary accuracy, but you cannot know them both with arbitrary accuracy simultaneously.
 
  • #18
lightarrow said:
Can you please explain this better? HUP is often expressed saying: "it's not possible to measure x and p simultaneously with arbitrary accuracy".

Sure. Just place a detector at a very large distance from a particle source and switch on the source for a small time. The accuracy in position is only limited by the detector resolution while the accuracy in momentum can be made arbitrary small by increasing the distance between the source and detector and/or decreasing the time when the source is on. However, the determined values cannot be used to make predictions about how the particle will evolve after detection, but you know them how they were in the past.
 
  • #19
jostpuur said:
The way you use term "simultaneous" seems confusing. If you first measure the position, and after it the momentum, then the measurements were not simultaneous.

That is why I clarified what I meant. Note that an instantaneous, simultaneous measurement is meaningless and irrelevant as far as the HUP is concerned. So this issue doesn't even matter. That is why I stated clearly what I meant as "simultaneous". In addition, I'm not the one who brought up the "simultaneous" issue.

Zz.
 
  • #20
ZapperZ said:
That is why I clarified what I meant. Note that an instantaneous, simultaneous measurement is meaningless and irrelevant as far as the HUP is concerned. So this issue doesn't even matter. That is why I stated clearly what I meant as "simultaneous". In addition, I'm not the one who brought up the "simultaneous" issue.

Zz.

Sorry, I'm not sure what you mean either. The textbooks I've looked at refer to either "simultaneously" or "at the same instant." The wording may be a little imprecise, but the uncertainty principle does make a statement about the degree to which two quantities can be measured accurately at the same time.
 
  • #21
country boy said:
The textbooks I've looked at refer to either "simultaneously" or "at the same instant." The wording may be a little imprecise, but the uncertainty principle does make a statement about the degree to which two quantities can be measured accurately at the same time.

Let forget about paradoxes for a while and let us try to understand what W.Heisenberg explain (for example, W. Heisenberg “The Physical Principles of the Quantum Theory”, Dover Publications, 1930 (the lectures given at the University of Chicago); it is first hand presentation of CI with N.Bohr removed).

Let return to normal discussion in physics: please, tell me what you want to know (measure), what the set-up you intend to use, what your physical system under test is, what the state of your system is before the measurement and what the state of your system is after the measurement. After receiving your answers we will continue about collapse in space and in time: notion of simultaneous (if you will use the usual Hilbert space math. formalism, think about that x*p is not self adjoint operator and, therefore, not observable).

Regards, Dany.
 
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  • #22
country boy said:
Sorry, I'm not sure what you mean either. The textbooks I've looked at refer to either "simultaneously" or "at the same instant." The wording may be a little imprecise, but the uncertainty principle does make a statement about the degree to which two quantities can be measured accurately at the same time.

But there is a difference between the order of the operation, is there not?

I mean, in principle, there need not be any "time lag" in measuring x and then p, but which one comes first does make a difference. There isn't a "composite operator" that measure x and p together, instantaneously. What does not matter is how long is the time interval between x and p, because, again, in principle, once x has been measured, then the minimum spread in p is "set in stone". So one could measure p "almost instantaneously" after x, and would not be able to escape the HUP. But the fact that there has to be a "one after the other" sequence means that it does matter which one comes first.

Zz.
 
  • #23
ZapperZ said:
But there is a difference between the order of the operation, is there not?

I mean, in principle, there need not be any "time lag" in measuring x and then p, but which one comes first does make a difference. There isn't a "composite operator" that measure x and p together, instantaneously. What does not matter is how long is the time interval between x and p, because, again, in principle, once x has been measured, then the minimum spread in p is "set in stone". So one could measure p "almost instantaneously" after x, and would not be able to escape the HUP. But the fact that there has to be a "one after the other" sequence means that it does matter which one comes first.

You are right, the order does matter. I think the key is that an "order" of operation does not imply an "order" in time. The operators xp and px are just producing numbers from the state function. But they have no time sequence.
 
  • #24
ZapperZ said:
This is NOT a fact. It is a misunderstanding of the HUP. We can "simultaneously" measure position and momentum with arbitrary accuracy (up to our present-day technology), if by "simultaneous", you mean a single measurement of position, and then followed by a single measurement of the momentum of that particle. The HUP never stated anything about an instantaneous and simultaneous measurement of both position and momentum. If it does, then the order of the commutation relation won't make a difference.

Zz.

When we talk about accuracy of measurements in this context, we essentially talk about standard deviations of the measurements, or they estimators s:

[tex]s = \sqrt{\frac{1}{(n-1)}\cdot\sum_{i=1}^n (X_i - X_m)^2}[/tex]

where [tex]X_i[/tex] is the i-esim measurement of the variable X and [tex]X_m[/tex] is its aritmetical average.

For 1 measurement, n=1 so

[tex]s = \infty.[/tex]

So it's not possible to talk about "arbitrary accuracy" in one single measure.
 
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  • #25
lightarrow said:
When we talk about accuracy of measurements in this context, we essentially talk about standard deviations of the measurements, or they estimators s:

[tex]s = \sqrt{\frac{1}{(n-1)}\cdot\sum_{i=1}^n (X_i - X_m)^2}[/tex]

where [tex]X_i[/tex] is the i-esim measurement of the variable X and [tex]X_m[/tex] is its aritmetical average.

For 1 measurement, n=1 so

[tex]s = \infty.[/tex]

So it's not possible to talk about "arbitrary accuracy" in one single measure.

No, you're making a typical mistake that most students who are studying things like Fourier series make. When you do n=0, you have to rederive the whole expression. This is because your numerator is also zero.

That expression doesn't work for only one measurement. There are no statistics of any kind. The accuracy of a single measurement depends on the instrument you use to measure it, not on the "spread" of the statistics of many measurements, because you haven't done many measurements.

Zz.
 
  • #26
lightarrow said:
...For 1 measurement, n=1 so

[tex]s = \infty.[/tex]

So it's not possible to talk about "arbitrary accuracy" in one single measure.
Also note that as n goes to infinity s approaches zero. That means the spread in the measurements becomes arbitrarily small. But the uncertainty principle imposes a limit on the spread of a large number of measurements.
 
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  • #27
country boy said:
Also note that as n goes to infinity s approaches zero. That means the spread in the measurements becomes arbitrarily small. But the uncertainty principle imposes a limit on the spread of a large number of measurements.
s approaches zero? It approaches sigma (standard deviation), not zero.
 
  • #28
lightarrow said:
s approaches zero? It approaches sigma (standard deviation), not zero.

Ah yes. Thanks. But in your context the standard deviation has to due with the accuracy of the measurements. That is not what HUP deals with.

[Added later] I've thought about this a little more, so let me edit it. The uncertainty principle puts limits on how well we can know the values of two conjugate quantities at the same time. These limits are independent of the accuracy of our measuring apparatus. The measurement accuracy can be much lower than the HUP uncertainty limit or it can be much higher. In the latter case, for example, the position of arrival of a single photon at a measurement screen can be known very accurately, but the position of the next photon is not accurately known to better than the HUP uncertainty.

I'm not sure that this is different from what you are referring to, and it may sound a bit trivial, but it is important to keep in mind the distinction between measurement accuracy and the fundamental uncertainty imposed by the wave nature of matter.
 
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  • #29
country boy said:
Ah yes. Thanks. But in your context the standard deviation has to due with the accuracy of the measurements. That is not what HUP deals with.

[Added later] I've thought about this a little more, so let me edit it. The uncertainty principle puts limits on how well we can know the values of two conjugate quantities at the same time. These limits are independent of the accuracy of our measuring apparatus. The measurement accuracy can be much lower than the HUP uncertainty limit or it can be much higher. In the latter case, for example, the position of arrival of a single photon at a measurement screen can be known very accurately, but the position of the next photon is not accurately known to better than the HUP uncertainty.
Yes, that's clear to me, but I was wondering how it's possible to define the instrument's measurement accuracy as the uncertainty in a single, unique measurements: if we make many measurements we have a non-vanishing uncertainty; but, the less measurements we perform, the less the accuracy, so the accuracy is at its least value for a single measurement.
 
  • #30
lightarrow said:
Yes, that's clear to me, but I was wondering how it's possible to define the instrument's measurement accuracy as the uncertainty in a single, unique measurements: if we make many measurements we have a non-vanishing uncertainty; but, the less measurements we perform, the less the accuracy, so the accuracy is at its least value for a single measurement.

Have you ever done an experiment? Try one. Pick a ruler, and measure a length of something. Now, what is the uncertainty in that length? That is the uncertainty in that single measurement and it depends entirely on the accuracy of the instrument. This is not the HUP. I can make it more or less accurate by changing instrument, regardless of what was measured before, or what will be measured after.

I think you still have a strong misconception of the HUP. Maybe you might want to read what I wrote a while back on this.

Zz.
 
  • #31
ZapperZ said:
Have you ever done an experiment? Try one. Pick a ruler, and measure a length of something. Now, what is the uncertainty in that length? That is the uncertainty in that single measurement and it depends entirely on the accuracy of the instrument. This is not the HUP. I can make it more or less accurate by changing instrument, regardless of what was measured before, or what will be measured after.

I think you still have a strong misconception of the HUP. Maybe you might want to read what I wrote a while back on this.

Zz.

So, if I make only one measurement I can have more accuracy than with more measurements? This seems nonsense to me.
 
  • #32
lightarrow said:
So, if I make only one measurement I can have more accuracy than with more measurements? This seems nonsense to me.

You are showing a general misconception of the HUP.
If you do one measurement, you get a result, which shows an accuracy corresponding to the accuracy of your measuring equipment.
If you are repeating these measurements under exactly the same circumstances (same initial state) you will find, that

a) for each of the measurements you get a result, which corresponds to the accuracy of your measuring equipment.
b) there is still a spread in your results, which is not due to the accuracy of your measuring equipment, although the initial state was the same at every measurement.

Case b) is what the HUP is about. The results are not reproducible exactly. Although the result of each measurement was exact, there is an intrinsic spread due to the quantum nature of what you are trying to measure.
 
  • #33
lightarrow said:
When we talk about accuracy of measurements in this context, we essentially talk about standard deviations of the measurements, or they estimators s:

[tex]s = \sqrt{\frac{1}{(n-1)}\cdot\sum_{i=1}^n (X_i - X_m)^2}[/tex]

where [tex]X_i[/tex] is the i-esim measurement of the variable X and [tex]X_m[/tex] is its aritmetical average.

For 1 measurement, n=1 so

[tex]s = \infty.[/tex]

So it's not possible to talk about "arbitrary accuracy" in one single measure.

I have another question about how you seem to be applying the standard deviation. The calculation of the variance or standard deviation requires all of the measurements to have been completed so that a mean can be determined. Alternatively, I guess you could have some prior knowledge of the mean from a previous experiment or from a theoretical prediction. Either way, without some prediction of the outcome you cannot use the standard deviation on a single measurement, can you?

By the way, since the mean of a single measurement is the measurement itself, the numerator and denominator are both zero, so the standard deviation is indeterminate (see ZapperZ's comments). That means formula still works, though, because in fact you can't determine s from one measurement.

It's interesting that you could start with the prediction of a mean derived from the wavefunction and then calculate something like the standard deviation (with n instead of n-1) as you accumulate measurements. The standard deviation should then be greater than or equal to the spread predicted from the wavefunction. This probably only has value as a mental exercise.
 
  • #34
lightarrow said:
So, if I make only one measurement I can have more accuracy than with more measurements? This seems nonsense to me.

It's nonsense because you didn't understand what I just said.

The accuracy of a single measurement depends on the accuracy of your instrument. Now do you dispute this? Let's get that out of the way first.

Now, if you make repeated measurement of the SAME thing (i.e. of the width of the slit, for example), then you will have an average value, and a standard deviation of the width of the slit based on the repeated measurement. However, each of the measurement in your data set is accompanied by its own uncertainty based on the uncertainty of a single measurement. This is the uncertainty that I'm talking about, and it has nothing to do with the HUP. That is the uncertainty of the instrumentation. If I was using a ruler to measure the width of the slit, I get a certain amount of uncertainty. If I instead switch to a micrometer caliper, then I have a smaller uncertainty in that measurement because I just switched to a more accurate derive that measures a length. So now I've just reduced the uncertainty of my length measurement with no regards to what is going on before and after that measurement. What is nonsense is to confuse that with the HUP.

Zz.
 
  • #35
ZapperZ said:
It's nonsense because you didn't understand what I just said.

The accuracy of a single measurement depends on the accuracy of your instrument. Now do you dispute this? Let's get that out of the way first.

Now, if you make repeated measurement of the SAME thing (i.e. of the width of the slit, for example), then you will have an average value, and a standard deviation of the width of the slit based on the repeated measurement. However, each of the measurement in your data set is accompanied by its own uncertainty based on the uncertainty of a single measurement. This is the uncertainty that I'm talking about, and it has nothing to do with the HUP. That is the uncertainty of the instrumentation. If I was using a ruler to measure the width of the slit, I get a certain amount of uncertainty. If I instead switch to a micrometer caliper, then I have a smaller uncertainty in that measurement because I just switched to a more accurate derive that measures a length. So now I've just reduced the uncertainty of my length measurement with no regards to what is going on before and after that measurement. What is nonsense is to confuse that with the HUP.

Zz.
ZapperZ, it was very clear what you intended with accuracy of a single measurement (= accuracy of the instrument) and the fact HUP concerns repeated measurement of the same thing.

What I wanted to discuss are 2 different things:

1. Independently on HUP, but talking about measurements in general, I don't understand how is possible to define the accuracy of a single measurement as the accuracy of the instrument - let's say 0.01 mm of something - if, repeating many times that measure with the same instrument, we have a standard deviation of 10 mm, for example. It was just a statistical consideration. Certainly, with only one measurement we have nothing else than the instrument's accuracy, but, IMO, we should never estimate the experiment accuracy from one only measurement, we should make at least two of them if we want to give a reasonable value of it (reasonable in the sense I wrote).

2. It's not clear to me if it's possible or not (as you say) to measure x and p of, let's say, a photon, simultaneously. This is because, infact, I'm now more confused on what we mean with "measure of position" and "measure of momentum".

Let's set, e.g., the following situation:

A plane, monocromatic electromagnetic wave traveling along the +z direction hits a screen with a slit, which width is d along the x direction (and D>>d in the y direction) and then hits a final screen parallel to the first and at distance L from it (so, a very standard arrangement).

According to what is written in some books (see, for example, A.Messiah - ch. 4, par.13), the light passing through the slit correspond to a position measurement of photons, with [tex]\Delta x = d[/tex] and to a momentum measurement with [tex]\Delta p_x = p\cdot\sin\alpha[/tex] where [tex]\alpha[/tex] is the angle of diffraction. Now I ask, since this is not stated: does it mean that the position measurement is performed before the momentum measurement?

Thank you for your patience.
 

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