What if the Planck constant was exactly zero?
I was thinking of a parallel universe in which the Planck constant has an exact value of zero. How would this effect the physics of that universe and how would it effect the development of that universe?
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Everything might be pitch black. Because there would be an infinite number of orbitals in each molecule (instead of discretized solutions to the Schrodinger equation (i.e. Hamiltonian) you would have infinitely many solutions to the spectra at infinitesimally-different energy levels) any photon could be absorbed by any molecule (unless some other weird effect stopped it...). Thus all matter would absorb all wavelengths of light.
Another problem would be the blackbody radiation paradox, otherwise known as ultraviolet catastrophe. Without quantization of photon energy, energy would be radiated at infinite energy at all temperatures.
Luckily the infinite energy would be immediately absorbed by the infinitely absorbing matter around it. :)
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This question really has no answer because it is phrased in a way which doesn't actually have much meaning.
As phrased, it appears as though the universe is governed by these constants, which can be dialed this way or that by some supreme force. In this universe, we'll set Planck's constant to
If we were to presume that the universe was nothing more than a set of equations and Planck's constant is something you can just dial down to 0, we get some strange behaviors. The first is the one that SudoSedWinifred mentioned. There is no quantization of energy in this universe. All of quantum physics immediately degenerates in messy piles of broken equations. It goes downhill from there. I don't know enough QM equations by memory, but the end result of setting Planck's constant to
So the real question is not what happens when Planck's constant is
Or you can just say "it's a parallel universe where
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Planck's constant is the quantum of action (energy transmission), so basically, this would be a world in which energy is not quantized, but rather infinitely divisible. This breaks our contemporary understanding of physics so badly it's hard to say what features a universe like this might have. If such a universe managed to have particles at all, they wouldn't be particles familiar to us, and their behavior would be completely different. Throw out your chemistry books... don't even count on having electrons.
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