60 research outputs found

    Casimir Force between a Half-Space and a Plate of Finite Thickness

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    Zero-frequency Casimir theory is analyzed from different viewpoints, focusing on the Drude-plasma issue that turns up when one considers thermal corrections to the Casimir force. The problem is that the plasma model, although leaving out dissipation in the material, apparently gives the best agreement with recent experiments. We consider a dielectric plate separated from a dielectric half-space by a vacuum gap, both media being similar. We consider the following categories: (1) Making use of the statistical mechanical method developed by H{\o}ye and Brevik (1998), implying that the quantized electromagnetic field is replaced by interaction between dipole moments oscillating in harmonic potentials, we first verify that the Casimir force is in agreement with the Drude prediction. No use of Fresnel's reflection coefficients is made at this stage. (2) Then turning to the field theoretical description implying use of the reflection coefficients, we derive results in agreement with the forgoing when first setting the frequency equal to zero, before letting the permittivity becoming large. With the plasma relation the reflection coefficient for TE zero frequency modes depend on the component of the wave vector parallel to the surfaces and lies between 0 and 1. This contradicts basic electrostatic theory. (3) Turning to high permeability magnetic materials the TE zero frequency mode describes the static magnetic field in the same way as the TM zero frequency modes describe the static electric fields in electrostatics. With the plasma model magnetic fields, except for a small part, can not pass through metals. i.e.~metals effectively become superconductors. However, recent experimental results clearly favor the plasma model. We shortly discuss a possible explanation for this apparent conflict with electrostatics.Comment: 18 pages latex, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Casimir friction at zero and finite temperatures

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    The Casimir friction problem for dielectric plates that move parallel to each other is treated by assuming one of the plates to be at rest. The other performs a closed loop motion in the longitudinal direction. Therewith by use of energy dissipation the formalism becomes more manageable and transparent than in the conventional setting where uniform sliding motion is assumed from t=−∞t=-\infty to t=+∞t=+\infty. One avoids separating off a reversible interparticle force (independent of friction) from the total force. Moreover, the cases of temperatures T=0T=0 and finite TT are treated on the same footing. For metal plates we find the friction force to be proportional to v3v^3 at T=0T=0 while at finite TT it is proportional to vv for small vv as found earlier. Comparisons with earlier results of Pendry (1997, 2010) and Barton (2011) are made.Comment: 20 pages latex, no figure

    Presence of negative entropies in Casimir interactions

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    Negative entropy in connection with the Casimir effect at uniform temperature is a phenomenon rooted in the circumstance that one is describing a nonclosed system, or only part of a closed system. In this paper we show that the phenomenon is not necessarily restricted to electromagnetic theory, but can be derived from the quantum theory of interacting harmonic oscillators, most typically two oscillators interacting not directly but indirectly via a third one. There are two such models, actually analogous to the transverse magnetic (TM) and transverse electric (TE) modes in electrodynamics. These mechanical models in their simplest version were presented some years ago, by J. S. H{\o}ye et al., Physical Review E {\bf 67}, 056116 (2003). In the present paper we re-emphasize the physical significance of the mechanical picture, and extend the theory so as to include the case where there are several mediating oscillators, instead of only one. The TE oscillator exhibits negative entropy. Finally, we show explicitly how the interactions via the electromagnetic field contain the two oscillator models.Comment: 12 pages, no figure
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