Experimentum crucis for electromagnetic response of metals to evanescent
waves and the Casimir puzzle
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2211.07276v1
- Date: Mon, 14 Nov 2022 11:15:16 GMT
- Title: Experimentum crucis for electromagnetic response of metals to evanescent
waves and the Casimir puzzle
- Authors: G. L. Klimchitskaya, V. M. Mostepanenko and V. B. Svetovoy
- Abstract summary: Casimir force calculated at large separations using the Lifshitz theory differs by a factor of 2 for metals described by the Drude or plasma models.
We argue that this difference is entirely determined by the contribution of transverse electric (s) evanescent waves.
- Score: 0.0
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: It is well known that the Casimir force calculated at large separations using
the Lifshitz theory differs by a factor of 2 for metals described by the Drude
or plasma models. We argue that this difference is entirely determined by the
contribution of transverse electric (s) evanescent waves. Taking into account
that there is a lack of experimental information on the electromagnetic
response of metals to low-frequency evanescent waves, we propose an experiment
on measuring the magnetic field of an oscillating magnetic dipole spaced in
vacuum above a thick metallic plate. According to our results, the lateral
components of this field are governed by the transverse electric evanescent
waves and may vary by orders of magnitude depending on the model describing the
permittivity of the plates used in calculations and the oscillation frequency
of the magnetic dipole. Measuring the lateral component of the magnetic field
for typical parameters of the magnetic dipole designed in the form of 1-mm
coil, one could either validate or disprove applicability of the Drude model as
a response function of metal in the range of low-frequency evanescent waves.
This will elucidate the roots of the Casimir puzzle lying in the fact that the
theoretical predictions of the Lifshitz theory using the Drude model are in
contradiction with the high-precision measurements of the Casimir force at
separations exceeding 150 nm. Possible implications of the suggested experiment
for a wide range of topics in optics and condensed matter physics dealing with
evanescent waves are discussed.
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