The Launch Complex
  LINKS

Homepage
Space Shuttle
International Space Station
Solar System

Space Facts
Space History

Famous People
    Ancient Epoch
    Middle Ages
    Renaissance
    Age of Enlightenment
    Modern Era
        Lowell
        Fleming
        Planck
        Leavitt
        Hale
        Rutherford
        Einstein
        Eddington
        Goddard
        Bohr
        Hubble
        Velikovsky
        Heisenberg
    Present Day
Space Milestones
Rocketry History
U.S. Space History
Space Multimedia

Space Games
Space News
X-Planes
Hot Sites
Guestbook

Last Updated: May 26, 2007
Webmaster:
Richard Kalie

Werner Heisenberg

(1901 - 1976 AD)

Werner Heisenberg was a German physicist who lived between 1901-1976. He developed new theories in quantum mechanics which agreed with the results of previous experiments.

Heisenberg is most famous for his uncertainty principle, which explains the impossibility of simultaneously knowing an object's position and momentum. However, this principle is only significant for submicroscopic particles such as electrons. Another of Heisenberg's famous theories maintained that a scientist interacts with an object while measuring it, and thus has some affect on it.

Heisenberg also wrote the plans for the first nuclear reactor in Germany and promoted such peaceful uses of nuclear energy.

**The preceding information is provided by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research's Windows to the Universe.**

Hosted by www.Geocities.ws

1