Consider a 2670 lb automobile clocked by law‑enforcement radar at a speed of 85.5 mph (miles per hour). If the position of the car is known to within 5.0 ft at the time of the measurement, what is the uncertainty in the velocity of the car?
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Consider a 2670 lb automobile clocked by law‑enforcement radar at a speed of 85.5 mph (miles...
Consider a 2870 lb automobile clocked by law-enforcement radar at a speed of 85.5 mph (miles per hour). If the position of the car is known to within 5.0 ft at the time of the measurement, what is the uncertainty in the velocity of the car? Δυ 2 mph If the speed limit is 75 mph, could the driver of the car reasonably evade a speeding ticket by invoking the Heisenberg uncertainty principle? O yes O no
Consider a 2510 lb automobile clocked by law enforcement radar at a speed of 85.5 mph (miles per hour). If the position of the car is known to within 5.0 ft at the time of the measurement, what is the uncertainty in the velocity of the car? Δυ Σ mph If the speed limit is 75 mph, could the driver of the car reasonably evade a speeding ticket by invoking the Heisenberg uncertainty principle? O O yes no
Consider a 2230-lb automobile clocked by law-enforcement radar at a speed of 85.5 mph (miles/hour). If the position of the car is known to within 5.0 feet at the time of the measurement, what is the uncertainty in the velocity of the car? DeltaV >= _____________ mph If the speed limit is 75 mph, could the driver of the car reasonably evade a speeding ticket by invoking the Heisenberg uncertainty principle? - YES - NO
Consider a 2690 lb automobile clocked by law‑enforcement radar at a speed of 85.5 mph (miles per hour). If the position of the car is known to within 5.0 ft at the time of the measurement, what is the uncertainty in the velocity of the car?
(10%) Problem 9: Slick Willy is in traffic court (again) contesting a $50.00 ticket for speeding. The speed limit was vo 50 mph and the police officer clocked Slick going vsw 68 mph. However, he was caught by a police officer driving towards him, so he is arguing that although the police officer measured him to be speeding, in reality he was not. Slick Willy is assuming that the Doppler shift in electromagnetic radiation is described in the same way...