6533b824fe1ef96bd1281659
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Effect of boundaries on vacuum field fluctuations and radiation-mediated interactions between atoms
Valentina NotararigoSalvatore SpagnoloGiuseppe FiscelliRoberto PassanteSalvatore ButeraFederico ArmataR. PalacinoLucia RizzutoR. IncardoneR. Incardonesubject
Electromagnetic fieldPhysicsQuantum PhysicsHistoryCondensed matter physicsField (physics)ResonanceFOS: Physical sciences01 natural sciences010305 fluids & plasmasComputer Science ApplicationsEducationPerfect mirror13. Climate actionVacuum fluctuations Energy densities Casimir effectExcited state0103 physical sciences010306 general physicsGround stateQuantum Physics (quant-ph)QuantumQuantum fluctuationdescription
In this paper we discuss and review several aspects of the effect of boundary conditions and structured environments on dispersion and resonance interactions involving atoms or molecules, as well as on vacuum field fluctuations. We first consider the case of a perfect mirror, which is free to move around an equilibrium position and whose mechanical degrees of freedom are treated quantum mechanically. We investigate how the quantum fluctuations of the mirror's position affect vacuum field fluctuations for both a one-dimensional scalar and electromagnetic field, showing that the effect is particularly significant in the proximity of the moving mirror. This result can be also relevant for possible gravitational effects, since the field energy density couples to gravity. We stress that this interaction-induced modification of the vacuum field fluctuations can be probed through the Casimir-Polder interaction with a polarizable body, thus allowing to detect the effect of the mirror's quantum position fluctuations. We then consider the effect of an environment such as an isotropic photonic crystal or a metallic waveguide, on the resonance interaction between two entangled identical atoms, one excited and the other in the ground state. We discuss the strong dependence of the resonance interaction with the relative position of the atomic transition frequency with the gap of the photonic crystal in the former case, and with the cut-off frequency of waveguide in the latter.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-01-01 |