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Anonymous at Mon, 1 Jul 2024 19:28:15 UTC No. 16263137
Given the Heisenberg uncertainty principle, is it really possible to create particle/antiparticle pairings that exist for extremely short periods of time before annihilating? Does this really mean that empty space is really empty?
Anonymous at Mon, 1 Jul 2024 21:35:31 UTC No. 16263355
No
Anonymous at Mon, 1 Jul 2024 22:36:29 UTC No. 16263442
>>16263137
Anon your rambling jargon that means absolute dog shit.
Start reading physics history start with Poincaré. Then work Your way up. Galeio may be interesting too. Newton is my favorite.
Mostly anything is better then the bullshit your spewing
Anonymous at Tue, 2 Jul 2024 01:27:17 UTC No. 16263609
>>16263137
No. This goes against Noether's theorem. Energy must be conserved because there's temporal symmetry. Heisenberg's principle would violate that, therefore it does not apply
Anonymous at Tue, 2 Jul 2024 02:03:03 UTC No. 16263638
>>16263609
Heisenberg's uncertainty principle certainly applies for energy and time which are conjugate variables just as momentum and position are. This is apparent for anyone who's tried to make ultrashort laser pulses, as these will have a broad energy spectrum by necessity.