Planck's 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
- .
A closely-related quantity is the reduced Planck constant (sometimes called Dirac's constant):
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
Planck's constant also occurs in statements of Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. The uncertainty in any position measurement, Δx, and the uncertainty in a momentum measurement along the same direction, Δp, obeys
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