I have been taking classes in theoretical physics and naturally been studying the heisenbergs uncertanty principle. So far the position-momentum kinda makes sense, but I can’t wrap my head around the energy-time uncertainty relation. Here is my problem:
Suppose you construct a potential and a wave function with only one eigenstate and thus only one defined energy. Then the energy uncertainty would have to be zero, but that would violate the energy-time uncertainty principle. Does that mean that the time uncertainty is infinite, and thus that you can’t measure the energy. Or does that imply that its impossible to construct a system with only one eigenstate?