top | item 16199379 (no title) testestx | 8 years ago > There must be something else in the Universe to observe the single proton for it to have rotation, etc, according to quantum physics.No, according to the Copenhagen interpretation. discuss order hn newest whatshisface|8 years ago Even in the Copenhagen interpretation states can have well-defined angular momenta before wavefunction collapse. vorg|8 years ago I thought in QM you couldn't know both the degree of rotation and the direction of the axis for a particle. If so, I wouldn't call that "well-defined".
whatshisface|8 years ago Even in the Copenhagen interpretation states can have well-defined angular momenta before wavefunction collapse. vorg|8 years ago I thought in QM you couldn't know both the degree of rotation and the direction of the axis for a particle. If so, I wouldn't call that "well-defined".
vorg|8 years ago I thought in QM you couldn't know both the degree of rotation and the direction of the axis for a particle. If so, I wouldn't call that "well-defined".
whatshisface|8 years ago
vorg|8 years ago