How does that newtonian equation work when we take more modern versions of physics into our considerations?
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
How does that newtonian equation work when we take more modern versions of physics into our considerations?
Classical mechanics is just an approximation of Quantum mechanics, there is the Ehrenfest theorem that arrives at Newton's second law using Schrödinger equation. When we assume Planck's constant to be zero, we get Newton's second law. Learned this in the Freshman year but can't remember the exact math behind Ehrenfest theorem. ;)
Thanks for the breakdown mate!