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advanced_notions:quantum_field_theory:casimir_effect [2017/10/27 15:34] jakobadmin ↷ Page moved from quantum_theory:casimir_effect to theories:quantum_theory:casimir_effect |
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====== Casimir Effect ====== | ====== Casimir Effect ====== | ||
- | <tabbox Why is it interesting?> | ||
- | <tabbox Layman> | ||
- | <note tip> | + | <tabbox Intuitive> |
- | Explanations in this section should contain no formulas, but instead colloquial things like you would hear them during a coffee break or at a cocktail party. | + | |
- | </note> | + | |
- | + | ||
- | <tabbox Student> | + | |
- | http://www.stat.physik.uni-potsdam.de/~pikovsky/teaching/stud_seminar/ajp_casimirforce.pdf | + | {{ :advanced_notions:quantum_field_theory:casimir1.png?nolink&400|}} |
+ | The Casimir effect is an observed attractive force between two uncharged metal plates due to quantum vacuum fluctuations. | ||
- | <note tip> | + | The quantum vacuum fluctuations can be interpreted as [[advanced_notions:quantum_field_theory:virtual_particles|virtual particles]] that permanently pop in and out of existence in the vacuum. |
- | In this section things should be explained by analogy and with pictures and, if necessary, some formulas. | + | |
- | </note> | + | |
- | + | ||
- | <tabbox Researcher> | + | |
- | <note tip> | + | The Casimir effect is a prediction of [[theories:quantum_field_theory:canonical|Quantum Field Theory]]. |
- | The motto in this section is: //the higher the level of abstraction, the better//. | + | |
- | </note> | + | |
- | --> Common Question 1# | + | ---- |
- | + | * [[https://gravityandlevity.wordpress.com/2009/10/09/being-pushed-around-by-empty-space-the-casimir-effect/|Being pushed around by empty space: The Casimir Effect]] by Brian Skinner | |
- | <-- | + | |
+ | <tabbox Concrete> | ||
- | --> Common Question 2# | + | {{ :advanced_notions:quantum_field_theory:casimir2.png?nolink&400 |}} |
- | + | * For a nice description see chapter 19 in Sleeping Beauties in Theoretical Physics by Thanu Padmanabhan | |
- | <-- | + | * http://www.stat.physik.uni-potsdam.de/~pikovsky/teaching/stud_seminar/ajp_casimirforce.pdf |
- | | + | * https://physics.stackexchange.com/questions/26877/regularization-of-the-casimir-effect |
- | <tabbox Examples> | + | |
- | --> Example1# | ||
- | + | <tabbox Abstract> | |
- | <-- | + | * The Casimir Effect and the Quantum Vacuum by R. L. Jaffe |
+ | * K. A. Milton, J. Phys. Conf. Ser. 161, 012001 (2009); The Casimir Effect: Physical Manifestations of Zero Point Energy (World Scientific, Singapore, 2001); | ||
+ | * M. Bordag, U. Mohideen, and V. M. Mostepanenko, Phys. Rep. 353, 1 (2001); | ||
+ | * M. Bordag, G. L. Klimchitskaya, U. Mohideen, and V. M. Mostepanenko, Advances in the Casimir Effect, International Series of Monographs on Physics (Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2009). | ||
- | --> Example2:# | ||
- | + | <tabbox Why is it interesting?> | |
- | <-- | + | |
- | + | The Casimir effect is an experimentally verified phenomenon that shows that the vacuum is not really empty, but filled with vacuum fluctuations. | |
- | <tabbox History> | + | |
</tabbox> | </tabbox> | ||