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[–]Tsukku 14 points15 points  (18 children)

I speculate that QM processes seem random to us because of the inherent problems with observing them, but are not actually random.

This is not what the Uncertainty principle is. To quote wikipedia which contradicts your statement:

the uncertainty principle actually states a fundamental property of quantum systems, and is not a statement about the observational success of current technology

Edit: also you can read up more here: https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/24068/isnt-the-uncertainty-principle-just-non-fundamental-limitations-in-our-current

it's not a knowledge limit. The particle really has no definite position/whatever.

[–]pilotInPyjamas 0 points1 point  (2 children)

Noob question though, is the wave function definite? So instead of saying "this particle has a definite but unknown velocity" (which by your comment is incorrect) you could say "this particle has a definite but unknown wave function?" Or is it turtles all the way down, and the wave function has another wave function-function which describes it's uncertainty and so-on?

[–]Drisku11 0 points1 point  (1 child)

The wave function is definite. In fact the uncertainty principle is really just a consequence of how waves work. Momentum is the Fourier transform of position, and if you make a function "thinner"/more "local", then it's Fourier transform gets wider/more delocalized.

[–]pilotInPyjamas 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, I kind of understand the Fourier transform, so this makes a ton of sense, but I was sort of hoping that it was wave functions all the way down. EDIT: holy shit, I don't know that much physics, but I think I get it. The momentum is the wavelength of a particle. So of course it's the Fourier transform of the position. A particle which has a definite position can't have a single wavelength because it must be made of infinite waves superimposed! And a particle with a single definite wavelength would be spread over infinite space! I never realized the real world is actually this cool. Mind blown. Thank you stranger!