hep-th/0510270 PDF
... 2. In the same 1998, two teams of astrophysicists, which were collecting supernovae 1a data with the aim to specificate parameters of cosmological expansion, reported about dimming remote supernovae [2, 3]; the one would be explained on a basis of the Doppler effect if at present epoch the universe ...
... 2. In the same 1998, two teams of astrophysicists, which were collecting supernovae 1a data with the aim to specificate parameters of cosmological expansion, reported about dimming remote supernovae [2, 3]; the one would be explained on a basis of the Doppler effect if at present epoch the universe ...
Polarizabilities of the beryllium clock transition
... wave function computed by a program written by the present author [23] using a (4s) STO basis. The exponent set was generated using a nonlinear optimization. Some = 0 valence orbitals were generated from the STOs used for the core. All the other orbitals were written as LTOs due to the superior li ...
... wave function computed by a program written by the present author [23] using a (4s) STO basis. The exponent set was generated using a nonlinear optimization. Some = 0 valence orbitals were generated from the STOs used for the core. All the other orbitals were written as LTOs due to the superior li ...
Effect of disorder on quantum phase transitions in
... average and typical correlations are associated with different critical exponents! have recently been found in the twodimensional random transverse field Ising model.31 The outline of the paper is as follows. In Sec. II we introduce the model, an anisotropic XY spin chain in a transverse field, wher ...
... average and typical correlations are associated with different critical exponents! have recently been found in the twodimensional random transverse field Ising model.31 The outline of the paper is as follows. In Sec. II we introduce the model, an anisotropic XY spin chain in a transverse field, wher ...
EM Waves
... instead a reflective coating so that it reflects electromagnetic waves. Which of the following statements is true? A The force on the object due to radiation pressure is the same whether the light is absorbed or reflected. B The force on the object due to radiation pressure is greater by a factor of ...
... instead a reflective coating so that it reflects electromagnetic waves. Which of the following statements is true? A The force on the object due to radiation pressure is the same whether the light is absorbed or reflected. B The force on the object due to radiation pressure is greater by a factor of ...
Solution to the World Energy Crisis
... physics—including special and general relativity, quantum mechanics, quantum electrodynamics, gauge field theory, quantum field theory, and particle physics— has been born and developed. Physics has made a century of progress since the old ...
... physics—including special and general relativity, quantum mechanics, quantum electrodynamics, gauge field theory, quantum field theory, and particle physics— has been born and developed. Physics has made a century of progress since the old ...
7. Static Electricity and Capacitance
... Most modern electronic devices contain a touchscreen. One type of touchscreen is a capacitive touchscreen, in which the user’s finger acts as a plate of a capacitor. Placing your finger on the screen will alter the capacitance and the electric field at that point. (i) Explain the underlined terms. ( ...
... Most modern electronic devices contain a touchscreen. One type of touchscreen is a capacitive touchscreen, in which the user’s finger acts as a plate of a capacitor. Placing your finger on the screen will alter the capacitance and the electric field at that point. (i) Explain the underlined terms. ( ...
Casimir effect
In quantum field theory, the Casimir effect and the Casimir–Polder force are physical forces arising from a quantized field. They are named after the Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir.The typical example is of two uncharged metallic plates in a vacuum, placed a few nanometers apart. In a classical description, the lack of an external field means that there is no field between the plates, and no force would be measured between them. When this field is instead studied using the QED vacuum of quantum electrodynamics, it is seen that the plates do affect the virtual photons which constitute the field, and generate a net force—either an attraction or a repulsion depending on the specific arrangement of the two plates. Although the Casimir effect can be expressed in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, it is best described and more easily calculated in terms of the zero-point energy of a quantized field in the intervening space between the objects. This force has been measured and is a striking example of an effect captured formally by second quantization. However, the treatment of boundary conditions in these calculations has led to some controversy.In fact, ""Casimir's original goal was to compute the van der Waals force between polarizable molecules"" of the metallic plates. Thus it can be interpreted without any reference to the zero-point energy (vacuum energy) of quantum fields.Dutch physicists Hendrik B. G. Casimir and Dirk Polder at Philips Research Labs proposed the existence of a force between two polarizable atoms and between such an atom and a conducting plate in 1947, and, after a conversation with Niels Bohr who suggested it had something to do with zero-point energy, Casimir alone formulated the theory predicting a force between neutral conducting plates in 1948; the former is called the Casimir–Polder force while the latter is the Casimir effect in the narrow sense. Predictions of the force were later extended to finite-conductivity metals and dielectrics by Lifshitz and his students, and recent calculations have considered more general geometries. It was not until 1997, however, that a direct experiment, by S. Lamoreaux, described above, quantitatively measured the force (to within 15% of the value predicted by the theory), although previous work [e.g. van Blockland and Overbeek (1978)] had observed the force qualitatively, and indirect validation of the predicted Casimir energy had been made by measuring the thickness of liquid helium films by Sabisky and Anderson in 1972. Subsequent experiments approach an accuracy of a few percent.Because the strength of the force falls off rapidly with distance, it is measurable only 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. In fact, at separations of 10 nm—about 100 times the typical size of an atom—the Casimir effect produces the equivalent of about 1 atmosphere of pressure (the precise value depending on surface geometry and other factors).In modern theoretical physics, the Casimir effect plays an important role in the chiral bag model of the nucleon; in applied physics, it is significant in some aspects of emerging microtechnologies and nanotechnologies.Any medium supporting oscillations has an analogue of the Casimir effect. For example, beads on a string as well as plates submerged in noisy water or gas illustrate the Casimir force.