Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle is one of the foundations of quantum mechanics. In simple terms, it says that we can't simultaneously know the value of two different properties of a particle because measuring one distorts the reading for the other. The wikipedia link above will shed more light on the topic for those who are interested. Now, however, Japanese researchers are suggesting that we have misunderstood the principle. We often think it is the act of measurement itself which causes the particle to appear to us in a certain way but we do know that the uncertainty is also in the quantum nature of the particle - we tend to speak as if the particle doesn't know what it is. A team led by Masanao Ozawa of Nagoya University has been looking at to what degree a particle is unknowable to us through the act of measurement and how much it is down to the particle itself. They have concluded that measuring is hardly an issue at all and the real uncertainty is almost entirely attributable to the fact particles are bonkers. The team was able to show experimentally that it's possible to reduce the disturbance caused by measurement to a level well below that predicted by Heisenberg.
The findings have just been published in British science journal Nature Physics.
German link
German translated to English via Babel