DrClapeyron
Do physicist use uncertainty and probability due to resolution problems when exploring subatomic or quantam properties? I can imagine a physicist somewhere running and experiment and getting a lot of output values for every input value, and trying to make sense by assigning some sort of equation to what the output should be for every input.
I can also imagine that the physicist would use some sort of graphing or statistical analysis to come to a very close approximation of what should be going on in the system, but never exactly what should happen just something very close.
Do those things lead to the separation between classical physics and quantum physics, and is that anypart of why quantum theory uses a lot of statistical analysis for things like determing the point of an electron?
I can also imagine that the physicist would use some sort of graphing or statistical analysis to come to a very close approximation of what should be going on in the system, but never exactly what should happen just something very close.
Do those things lead to the separation between classical physics and quantum physics, and is that anypart of why quantum theory uses a lot of statistical analysis for things like determing the point of an electron?
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