Physics:Quantum Casimir effect
The Quantum Casimir effect is a physical force that can arise between closely spaced conducting or dielectric objects because quantum vacuum fluctuations are modified by boundary conditions. The simplest ideal example is an attractive force between two parallel conducting plates in vacuum.[1]
The effect is named after Hendrik Casimir, who predicted it in 1948. It is often described as a consequence of the fact that the allowed electromagnetic field modes between the plates differ from those outside them.
Vacuum modes
In quantum field theory, even the vacuum has fluctuating fields and zero-point energy. Boundaries restrict which modes can exist in a region. When the mode structure changes, the vacuum energy and stress can change as well.
The resulting force depends on geometry, material properties, separation distance, and temperature. Real experiments require careful treatment of finite conductivity, surface roughness, and electrostatic effects.
Significance
The Casimir effect connects vacuum fields, boundary conditions, and measurable forces. It is important in precision measurements, nanoscale devices, and conceptual discussions of vacuum energy.
It should not be confused with unlimited extraction of energy from the vacuum; the effect is a boundary-dependent force within ordinary quantum field theory.
See also
- Physics:Quantum vacuum field
- Physics:Quantum zero-point energy
- Physics:Quantum electromagnetic field
- Physics:Quantum Boundary conditions and quantization
References
Source attribution: Physics:Quantum Casimir effect