I said I don't care if your reference is to an experiment with inexact measurements. All I have been asking is for a reference to an experiment with simutaneous measurements of any accuracy, for quantum particles or photons.
The UCP is about the uncertainty of knowing two measurements with certainty simultaneously. The empirical fact is that we do not have the ability to measure both at the same time, even in theory.
Do you get it? Position is measured at an instant.., a point in space, while momentum or energy is always measured over time. While you are measuring momentum position is changing. We have no detectors that can measure both, at the same time, at quantum scales. The closest we can get is to make sequential measurements, which give us no information about simutaneous values.
Read slowly and more than once if you have to. I know I do not explain things well all of the time. Do you get it now?
The complementarity principle always implies sharp measurement. Experiments [25,26] which furnish partial interference with partial knowledge of the which path do not invalidate BCP. The `trade-off' is consistent with the quantum formalism and expressed in terms of the well-known Englert-Greenberger duality relation [27{29]. -http://www.ias.ac.in/pramana/v72/p765/fulltext.pdf
Bohr cited the uncertainty relation as a symbolic expression of complementarity but recognized that this relation also offered room for approximately defined simultaneous values of position and momentum. -http://philsci-archive.pitt.edu/4114/1/welcher-weg-experiment_Busch-Jaeger_philsci.pdf
Often the duality is rephrased in terms of Bohr’s complementarity principle (Bohr 1935) where particle nature is equated with well-defined position and wave nature with well-defined momentum. In the last few decades attempts have been made to quantify the duality more rigorously. For example Wootters and Zurek (1979) formulated an inequality for a double slit experiment that expresses a lower bound on the loss of path information for a given sharpness of the interference pattern. -http://arxiv.org/pdf/1105.0083.pdf
Probably pointless to provide you with further references.