Authors
Joseph Klafter, Michael F Shlesinger, Gert Zumofen
Publication date
1996/2/1
Journal
Physics today
Volume
49
Issue
2
Pages
33-39
Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Description
Newtonian physics began with an attempt to make precise predictions about natural phenomena, predictions that could be accurately checked by observation and experiment. The goal was to understand nature as a deterministic, “clockwork” universe. The application of probability distributions to physics developed much more slowly. Early uses of probability arguments focused on distributions with well‐defined means and variances. The prime example was the Gaussian law of errors, in which the mean traditionally represented the most probable value from a series of repeated measurements of a fixed quantity, and the variance was related to the uncertainty of those measurements.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
J Klafter, MF Shlesinger, G Zumofen - Physics today, 1996