In Quantum Mechanics two quantities can be measured simultaneously, if their operators commute.
The operator for the radiation energy (kinetic) is the following:
where "\\Delta = \\dfrac{\\partial^2}{\\partial x^2} + \\dfrac{\\partial^2}{\\partial y^2} + \\dfrac{\\partial^2}{\\partial z^2}" is the Laplacian.
The operator for the momentum is the following:
where "\\nabla = \\left( \\dfrac{\\partial}{\\partial x}, \\dfrac{\\partial}{\\partial y}, \\dfrac{\\partial}{\\partial z}\\right)" is the nabla operator.
These operators commute if the following equation is true:
"\\hat{T}\\hat{\\mathbf{p}} =\\hat{\\mathbf{p}}\\hat{T}"
As far as both operators consist of a partial derivatives, the question is whether or not we can change the order of the derivatives. According to the Clairaut's theorem, we can do it. Thus:
Thus, operators comute and we can measure the energy and momentum of a radiation at the same time.
Answer. Yes, his claim is correct.
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