How did Heisenberg contribute to the atomic theory?

1 Answer
Apr 27, 2014

Heisenberg contributed through his uncertainty principal.

He stated that an electron's velocity and location can not possible be known simultaneously. The reason for this is because an electron is such a tiny tiny amount of mass, the act of observing it with any kind of light (radiation) would move the particle in a different direction/velocity.

When you want to locate your phone across a room, you look at it and light bounces off of your phone to your eye. If you look at an electron, light (photons) hit the electron, thus moving it in a different direction and speed.

The exact formula for calculating the uncertainty of an electron goes:
Δx > h/4πmΔv

Where Δx = the uncertainty
h = 6.626 x 10-34 J-s
m = mass of electron (9.109 x 10 -31 kg)
Δv = the degree of certainty you are given (e.g. "speed is known to within 0.01m/s")

Sometimes the uncertainty can be bigger than the atom itself which is why electrons have never been observed directly.

Complete presentation in simple terms here: http://chemistry.tutorvista.com/organic-chemistry/werner-heisenberg-atomic-theory.html