Andeh Posted March 2, 2012 Posted March 2, 2012 Is planck length a property of particles or a property of space? In other words, is there such a thing as planck length because space is only "accurate" to that distance (almost like how GPS are only accurate to a few feet, and therefore can't distinguish between two objects closer than that), and if so, what could cause this? Or is there such a thing as planck length because even after a particle's wavefunction has been collapsed, it still has uncertainty of location down to planck length? Or is it due to something else entirely?
mathematic Posted March 2, 2012 Posted March 2, 2012 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck_length Try the above.
QuantumBullet Posted December 17, 2012 Posted December 17, 2012 The Planck length is a necessary component of String Theory. In fact the Mathematics of String Theory ensures that this is the smallest possible length, since any 'measurement' taken that is within an area with a radius smaller than the Planck length, is mathematically indistinguishable from a measurement taken within an area with a radius equal to the reciprocal of the smaller length. Essentially, if you can imagine (which of course, you can't) a universe which has a radius equal to 1/10 the Planck length (10^-62 m), this would be mathematically indistinguishable from a Universe with a radius equal to the reciprocal of this - approximately 10^62 m, which is much much larger than the size of the current observable universe. it is this reciprocality which prevents any distance smaller than the Planck length from occuring; since the dual to this measurement will be larger than the Planck length.
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