In Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle, is the uncertainty in the position a 2 dimensional, 3 dimensional, or 4 dimensional?
1 Answer
The easiest version of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle demonstrates the principle in one dimension, but it can be "expanded" to
"ONE-DIMENSIONAL VERSION"
The "one-dimensional version" is presented in the
#color(blue)(sigma_(vecx)sigma_(vecp_x) >= (h)/(4pi)),# where:
#h# is Planck's constant,#6.626xx10^(-34) "J"cdot"s"# .#sigma_(vecx)# is the uncertainty in the position in the#x# direction.#sigma_(vecp_x)# is the uncertainty in the momentum in the#x# direction.
But this can be expanded and generalized to all three dimensions
#color(blue)(sigma_(vecx)sigma_(vecp_x) >= (h)/(4pi))#
#color(blue)(sigma_(vecy)sigma_(vecp_y) >= (h)/(4pi))#
#color(blue)(sigma_(vecz)sigma_(vecp_z) >= (h)/(4pi))#
GENERAL FORMULATION OF HEISENBERG UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE
Actually, a general formulation of the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle to determine the capacity to observe two observables simultaneously is (Physical Chemistry: A Molecular Approach, McQuarrie):
#\mathbf([hatA,hatB] -= hatAhatB - hatBhatA stackrel(?)(=) 0)#
A quantum mechanical observable is the eigenvalue (a "fixed point") that corresponds to a given operator. So, it is what you observe in real life, with certainty that it is what you think it is, for each given time that you observe it.
If the anticommutation relation
THE POSITION AND MOMENTUM OPERATORS
If we let
#color(green)(hatxf(x) = x[f(x)])#
(multiply by#x# )
#color(green)(hatpf(x) = -(ih)/(2pi)d/(dx)[f(x)])#
(multiply by#(-ih)/(2pi)# and take the derivative of#f(x)# ;#i# is#sqrt(-1)# .)
...if and only if
In the above equations,
AN ANTICOMMUTATION RELATION IS NONZERO FOR TWO OBSERVABLES THAT CANNOT BE OBSERVED SIMULTANEOUSLY
To perform the anticommutation relation to check if
#color(blue)([hatxhatp - hatphatx]f(x) stackrel(?)(=) 0)#
#= [x*(-ih)/(2pi)d/(dx) - (-ih)/(2pi)d/(dx)*x]f(x)#
#= x*(-ih)/(2pi)d/(dx)f(x) - (-ih)/(2pi)d/(dx)*xf(x)#
(distribute)
#= (-ixh)/(2pi)d/(dx)f(x) - (-ih)/(2pi)[xd/(dx)f(x) + f(x)]#
(product rule)
#= (-ixh)/(2pi)d/(dx)f(x) - (-ih)/(2pi)[xd/(dx) + 1]f(x)#
(factor)
#= (-ixh)/(2pi)d/(dx)f(x) - [(-ih)/(2pi) + (-ihx)/(2pi)d/(dx)]f(x),#
(distribute)
#= [cancel((-ixh)/(2pi)d/(dx)) - ((-ih)/(2pi) + cancel((-ihx)/(2pi)d/(dx)))]f(x),#
(cancel)
#= color(blue)((ih)/(2pi))# but
#color(red)(0 ne (ih)/(2pi))# , so the position and momentum operators do NOT commute.
That means they are subject to the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle and cannot be observed simultaneously. In other words, knowing one to maximum certainty implies knowing the other to maximum uncertainty.
Furthermore, the position operators for the
#hatyf(y) = y[f(y)]#
#hatzf(z) = z[f(z)]#
All position operators do is multiply by the given eigenfunction
At this point, we can then say that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle for position and momentum applies in any dimension.