Casimir effect
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In physics, the Casimir effect is a physical force exerted between separate objects, which is due to neither charge, gravity, nor the exchange of particles, but instead is due to resonance of all-pervasive energy fields in the intervening space between the objects. This is sometimes described in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, due to the mathematical form of one possible way of calculating the strength of the effect. Since the strength of the force falls off rapidly with distance it is only measurable when the distance between the objects is extremely small. On a submicron scale this force becomes so strong, that it becomes the dominant force between uncharged conductors.
Dutch physicist Hendrik B. G. Casimir first proposed the existence of the force, and he formulated an experiment to detect it in 1948 while participating in research at Philips Research Labs. The classic form of his experiment used a pair of uncharged parallel metal plates in a vacuum, and successfully demonstrated the force to within 15% of the value he had predicted according to his theory.
The van der Waals force between a pair of neutral atoms is a similar effect. In modern theoretical physics, the Casimir effect plays an important role in the chiral bag model of the nucleon, and in applied physics, it is becoming of increasing importance in development of the ever-smaller, miniaturised components of emerging micro- and nano- technologies.
Overview
The Casimir effect can be understood by the idea that the presence of conducting metals and dielectrics alter the vacuum expectation value of the energy of the electromagnetic field. Since the value of this energy depends on the shapes and positions of the conductors and dielectrics, the Casimir effect manifests itself as a force between such objects.Vacuum energy
The Casimir effect is an outcome of quantum field theory, which states that all of the various fundamental fields, such as the electromagnetic field, must be quantized at each and every point in space. In a naïve sense, a field in physics may be envisioned as if space were filled with interconnected vibrating balls and springs, and the strength of the field can be visualized as the displacement of a ball from its rest position. Vibrations in this field propagate, and are governed by the appropriate wave equation for the particular field in question. The second quantization of quantum field theory requires that each such ball-spring combination be quantized, that is, that the strength of the field be quantized at each point in space. Canonically, the field at each point in space is a simple harmonic oscillator, and its quantization places a quantum harmonic oscillator at each point. Excitations of the field correspond to the elementary particles of particle physics. However, as this picture shows, even the vacuum has a vastly complex structure. All calculations of quantum field theory must be made in relation to this model of the vacuum.The vacuum has, implicitly, all of the properties that a particle may have: spin, or polarization in the case of light, energy, and so on. On average, all of these properties cancel out: the vacuum is after all, "empty" in this sense. One important exception is the vacuum energy or the vacuum expectation value of the energy. The quantization of a simple harmonic oscillator states that the lowest possible energy or zero-point energy that such an oscillator may have is
- [ = \begin \frac \end \hbar \omega \ .]
The Casimir effect
Casimir's observation was that the second-quantized, quantum electromagnetic field, in the presence of bulk bodies such as metals or dielectrics, must obey the same boundary conditions that the classical electromagnetic field must obey. In particular, this affects the calculation of the vacuum energy in the presence of a conductor or dielectric.
Consider, for example, the calculation of the vacuum expectation value of the electromagnetic field inside a metal cavity, such as, for example, a radar cavity or a microwave waveguide. In this case, the correct way to find the zero point energy of the field is to sum the energies of the standing waves of the cavity. To each and every possible standing wave corresponds an energy; say the energy of the nth standing wave is [E_n]. The vacuum expectation value of the electromagnetic field in the cavity is then
- [\langle E \rangle = \frac \sum_n E_n]
In particular, one may ask how the zero point energy depends on the shape s of the cavity. Each energy level [E_n] depends on the shape, and so one should write [E_n(s)] for the energy level, and [\langle E(s) \rangle] for the vacuum expectation value. At this point comes an important observation: the force at point p on the wall of the cavity is equal to the change in the vacuum energy if the shape s of the wall is perturbed a little bit, say by [\delta s], at point p. That is, one has
- [F(p) = - \left. \frac \right\vert_p\,]
Casimir's calculation
In the original calculation done by Casimir, he considered the space between a pair of conducting metal plates a distance a apart. In this case, the standing waves are particularly easy to calculate, since the transverse component of the electric field and the normal component of the magnetic field must vanish on the surface of a conductor. Assuming the parallel plates lie in the x-y plane, the standing waves are
- [\psi_n(x,y,z,t) = e^ e^ \sin \left( k_n z \right)]
- [k_n = \frac]
- [\omega_n = c \sqrt]
- [\langle E \rangle = \frac \cdot 2\int \frac \sum_^\infty A\omega_n ]
- [\frac = \hbar \int \frac \sum_^\infty \omega_n \vert \omega_n\vert^]
- [\frac = \frac} \sum_n \int_0^\infty 2\pi qdq \left \vert q^2 + \frac \right\vert^]
- [\frac = -\frac \pi^}} \frac\sum_n \vert n\vert ^]
- [\frac = \lim_ \frac = -\frac }} \zeta (-3)]
- [\frac = \frac }}]
- [ = -\frac \frac =-\frac ]
- [\hbar] (hbar, ℏ) is the reduced Planck constant,
- [c] is the speed of light,
- [a] is the distance between the two plates.
Measurement
One of the first experimental tests was conducted by Marcus Spaarnay at Philips in Eindhoven, in 1958, in a delicate and difficult experiment with parallel plates, obtaining results not in contradiction with the Casimir theory, but with large experimental errors.The Casimir effect was measured more accurately in 1997 by Steve K. Lamoreaux of Los Alamos National Laboratory and by Umar Mohideen of the University of California at Riverside and his colleague Anushree Roy. In practice, rather than using two parallel plates, which would require phenomenally accurate alignment to ensure they were parallel, the experiments use one plate that is flat and another plate that is a part of a sphere with a large radius of curvature. In 2001, a group at the University of Padua finally succeeded in measuring the Casimir force between parallel plates using microresonators.
Further research has shown that, with materials of certain permittivity and permeability, or with a certain configuration, the Casimir effect could be made repulsive instead of attractive, although there are no experimental demonstrations of these predictions.
Regularization
In order to be able to perform calculations in the general case, it is convenient to introduce a regulator in the summations. This is an artificial device, used to make the sums finite so that they can be more easily manipulated, followed by the taking of a limit so as to remove the regulator.The heat kernel or exponentially regulated sum is
- [\langle E(t) \rangle = \frac \sum_n \hbar |\omega_n| \exp (-t|\omega_n|)]
- [\langle E(t) \rangle = \frac + \textrm\,]
- [\langle E(t) \rangle = \frac \sum_n \hbar |\omega_n| \exp (-t^2|\omega_n|^2)]
- [\langle E(s) \rangle = \frac \sum_n \hbar |\omega_n| |\omega_n|^]
Not every cavity configuration necessarily leads to a finite part (the lack of a pole at s=0) or shape-independent infinite parts. In this case, it should be understood that additional physics has to be taken into account. In particular, at extremely large frequencies (above the plasma frequency), metals become transparent to photons (such as x-rays), and dielectrics show a frequency-dependent cutoff as well. This frequency dependence acts as a natural regulator. There are a variety of bulk effects in solid state physics, mathematically very similar to the Casimir effect, where the cutoff frequency comes into explicit play to keep expressions finite. (These are discussed in greater detail in Landau and Lifshitz, "Theory of Continuous Media".)
Generalities
The Casimir effect can also be computed using the mathematical mechanisms of functional integrals of quantum field theory, although such calculations are considerably more abstract, and thus difficult to comprehend. In addition, they can be carried out only for the simplest of geometries. However, the formalism of quantum field theory makes it clear that the vacuum expectation value summations are in a certain sense summations over so-called "virtual particles".More interesting is the understanding that the sums over the energies of standing waves should be formally understood as sums over the eigenvalues of a Hamiltonian. This allows atomic and molecular effects, such as the van der Waals force, to be understood as a variation on the theme of the Casimir effect. Thus one considers the Hamiltonian of a system as a function of the arrangement of objects, such as atoms, in configuration space. The change in the zero-point energy as a function of changes of the configuration can be understood to result in forces acting between the objects.
In the chiral bag model of the nucleon, the Casimir energy plays an important role in showing the mass of the nucleon is independent of the bag radius. In addition, the spectral asymmetry is interpreted as a non-zero vacuum expectation value of the baryon number, cancelling the topological winding number of the pion field surrounding the nucleon.
Analogies
A similar analysis can be used to explain Hawking radiation that causes the slow "evaporation" of black holes (although this is generally explained as the escape of one particle from a virtual particle-antiparticle pair, the other particle having been captured by the black hole).References
- H.B.G. Casimir, Proc. Kon. Nederland. Akad. Wetensch. B51, 793 (1948)
- [Casimir effect description] from University of California, Riverside's version of the [Usenet physics FAQ].
- A. Lambrecht, "[The Casimir effect: a force from nothing]", Physics World, September 2002.
- G. Bressi, G. Carugno, R. Onofrio, G. Ruoso, "[Measurement of the Casimir force between Parallel Metallic Surfaces]", Phys. Rev. Lett. 88 041804 (2002)
- M. Bordag, U. Mohideen, V.M. Mostepanenko, "[New Developments in the Casimir Effect]", ArXiv quant-ph/0106045. (275 page review paper.)
- O. Kenneth, I. Klich, A. Mann and M. Revzen, Repulsive Casimir forces, Department of Physics, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, February 2002
- S. K. Lamoreaux, "[Demonstration of the Casimir Force in the 0.6 to 6 µm Range]", Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 5–8 (1997)
- J. D. Barrow, "[Much ado about nothing]", (2005) Lecture at Gresham College. (Includes discussion of French naval analogy.)
- (Also includes discussion of French naval analogy.)
- G. Lang, [The Casimir Force] web site, 2002
- V.V. Nesterenko, G. Lambiase, G. Scarpetta, [Calculation of the Casimir energy at zero and finite temperature: some recent results], arXiv:hep-th/0503100 v2 13 May 2005
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