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Encyclopedia > Reduced Planck constant

Planck's constant, denoted h, is a physical constant that is used to describe the sizes of quanta. It plays a central role in the theory of quantum mechanics, and is named after Max Planck, one of the founders of quantum theory. It has a value of approximately

.

With eV·s as energy unit:

Planck's constant has units of energy multiplied by time, which are the units of action. These units may also be written as momentum times distance (N·m·s), which are the units of angular momentum.


A closely-related quantity is the reduced Planck constant (sometimes called Dirac's constant):

where π is the constant pi. This constant is pronounced as "h-bar".


The figures cited here are the 2002 CODATA-recommended values for the constants and their uncertainties. The 2002 CODATA results were made available in December 2003 and represent the best-known, internationally-accepted values for these constants, based on all data available through 31 December 2002. New CODATA figures are scheduled to be published approximately every four years.


Planck's constant is used to describe quantization, a phenomenon occurring in microscopic particles such as electrons and photons in which certain physical properties occur in fixed amounts rather than assuming a continuous range of possible values. For instance, the energy E carried by a beam of light with constant frequency ν can only take on the values

It is sometimes more convenient to use the angular frequency ω=2πν, which gives

Many such "quantization conditions" exist. A particularly interesting condition governs the quantization of angular momentum. Let J be the total angular momentum of a system with rotational invariance, and Jz the angular momentum measured along any given direction. These quantities can only take on the values

Thus, may be said to be the "quantum of angular momentum".


Planck's constant also occurs in statements of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. The uncertainty (more precisely: the standard deviation) in any position measurement, Δx, and the uncertainty in a momentum measurement along the same direction, Δp, obeys

There are a number of other such pairs of physically measurable values which obey a similar rule.


On some browsers, the Unicode symbol ℎ (ℎ) is rendered as Planck's constant, and the symbol ℏ (ℏ) is rendered as Dirac's constant.


See also

Reference

  • NIST (http://physics.nist.gov/cgi-bin/cuu/Value?h) link to CODATA value

  Results from FactBites:
 
Planck's constant: Definition and Much More from Answers.com (1020 words)
Planck's constant (denoted h) is a physical constant that is used to describe the sizes of quanta.
Planck's constant is also used in measuring energy emitted by light photons, such as in the equation E=hν, where E is energy, h is Planck's constant, and ν (Greek letter nu) is frequency.
Planck's constant and the reduced Planck's constant are used to describe quantization, a phenomenon occurring in subatomic particles such as electrons and photons in which certain physical properties occur in fixed amounts rather than assuming a continuous range of possible values.
Planck's Hypothesis (1064 words)
Planck, who was a colleague of Wien's when he was carrying out this work, later, in 1900, based quantum theory on the fact that Wien's law, while valid at high frequencies, broke down completely at low frequencies.
Planck himself in [7] explains how despite having invented quantum theory he did not understand it himself at first:- I tried immediately to weld the elementary quantum of action somehow in the framework of classical theory.
Planck was also the first to succeed in getting, by means of the said relation, a highly accurate value for the number in question, the so-called Avogadro constant.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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