Mesoscopic Casimir forces from effects of discrete particle number in the quantum vacuum
read the original abstract
Traditionally it is assumed that the Casimir vacuum pressure does not depend on the ultraviolet cut-off. There are, however, some arguments that the effect actually depends on the regularization procedure and thus on the trans-Planckian physics. We provide the condensed matter example where the Casimir forces do explicitly depend on the microscopic (correspondingly trans-Planckian) physics due to the mesoscopic finite-N effects, where N is the number of bare particles in condensed matter (or correspondingly the number of the elements comprising the quantum vacuum). The finite-N effects lead to mesoscopic fluctuations of the vacuum pressure. The amplitude of the mesoscopic flustuations of the Casimir force in a system with linear dimension L is larger by the factor N^{1/3}\sim L/a than the traditional value of the Casimir force given by effective theory, where a is the interatomic distance which plays the role of the Planck length.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.