What is the dimensional formula for Planck's constant?

  • Thread starter Thread starter forest chump
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Formula
forest chump
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
Good day. Forum newbie / physics rookie here.

I need the dimensional formula for Planck

5p3ll!ng is not my strong suite...but I can quantify "5p3ll!ng" to the nth degree.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
Sorry, cell phone typo...

The dimensional formula for Planck's Constant... m? L? T?
 
What about using wikipedia?

A good way to remember the dimension of h is the uncertainty principle. xp, Et, lθ, etc. all have the same dimension as h.
 
Thanks kith...

Have you looked at the Wikipedia page for the Planck Constant and found the dimensional formula? It's not there.

Also, google produces inconsistent responses.

I'm assuming h = m L^2 T^-1

However, assumptions will land me in algebraic purgatory. I'll review your response to verify my assumption...
 
forest chump said:
Have you looked at the Wikipedia page for the Planck Constant and found the dimensional formula? It's not there.
Yes it is. It says "Js" numerous times. You could have arrived there also by considering my hint [h]=[E][t]=Js. Also Js = kg m² / s, so your assumption is correct.
 
kith: I asked a simple straight-forward question that has a difinitive answer. You gave me homework. I even said "physics rookie".

You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make a physics rookie drink mass, length, and the reciprocal of time by offering hints that the uncertainty principal has ANYTHING to do with joules multiplied by time.

That's for future reference.

Thanks for confirming my assumption...I'm going to take your lesson to heart so I can move on from my rookie status. :)
 
I was trying to understand what prevented you from solving the simple question by using wikipedia. Physics is not so much about answers but about how you get there. Sorry for assuming that you wanted to understand. ;-)

forest chump said:
You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make a physics rookie drink mass, length, and the reciprocal of time by offering hints that the uncertainty principal has ANYTHING to do with joules multiplied by time.
Why not just ask about the hint if you don't understand it? The uncertainty principle for energy and time reads ΔEΔt ≥ ħ/2. The right-hand side has the dimension of h, so the left-hand side needs to have the same dimension as h. This tells you that the dimension of h is Js.
 
Why not ask about the hint?

Because math & physics gurus are notoriusly "holier than thou". Asking about hints often leads me to long-winded discusions and complex formulas that confuse the issue even futher.

That's why I prefer industrial arts. :)
 
forest chump said:
kith: I asked a simple straight-forward question that has a difinitive answer. You gave me homework.

Around here we tend to take seriously the parable about giving a man a fish versus teaching him how to fish. :wink:
 
  • #10
jtbell: when dealing with a rookie fisherman, do you hand him a shovel and expect he should know that it's used to dig for worms?

Teaching a rookie means walking him through the process.

Again: "holier than thou".
 
  • #11
The question has been asked and answered, and has derailed. Closed.
 

Similar threads

Replies
2
Views
1K
Replies
11
Views
3K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
17
Views
3K
Replies
3
Views
263
Replies
17
Views
3K
Back
Top