Vacuum energy in quantum field theory, being the sum of zero-point energies of all field modes, is formally infinite but yet, after regularization or renormalization, can give rise to finite observable effects. One way of understanding how these effects arise is to compute the vacuum energy in an idealized system such as a large cavity divided into disjoint regions by pistons. In this paper, this type of calculation is carried out for situations where the potential affecting a field is not the same in all regions of the cavity. It is shown that the observable parts of the vacuum energy in such potentials do not fall off to zero as the region where the potential is nontrivial becomes large. This unusual behavior might be interesting for test...
We consider a massless scalar field in a one-dimensional cavity with one fixed and one mobile wall. ...
The vacuum energies corresponding to massive Dirac fields with the boundary conditions of the MIT ba...
The quantum vacuum consists of virtual particles randomly appearing and disappearing in free space. ...
Considering the fundamental cutoff applied by the uncertainty relations’ limit on virtual particles’...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 120-133)A central theme in this dissertation is the notion o...
A possible connection between the energy W of the vacuum fluctuations of quantum fields and gravity ...
We consider and review the emergence of singular field fluctuations or energy densities at sharp bou...
We consider the zero-point field fluctuations, and the related field energy densities, inside a one-...
Nonlinearities in the dispersion relations associated with different interactions designs, boundary ...
The energy density of the vacuum is still one of the unsolved questions in physics. Principally it s...
In Dirac's hole theory the vacuum state is generally believed to be the state of minimum energy. It ...
We present and study a possible mechanism of extracting energies from the vacuum by external classic...
AbstractThe regularized vacuum energy (or energy density) of a quantum field subjected to static ext...
© 2019 by the authors. The problem of an enormously large energy density of the quantum vacuum is di...
Relativistic quantum degrees of freedom in their vacuum state endow geometric backgrounds with an en...
We consider a massless scalar field in a one-dimensional cavity with one fixed and one mobile wall. ...
The vacuum energies corresponding to massive Dirac fields with the boundary conditions of the MIT ba...
The quantum vacuum consists of virtual particles randomly appearing and disappearing in free space. ...
Considering the fundamental cutoff applied by the uncertainty relations’ limit on virtual particles’...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 120-133)A central theme in this dissertation is the notion o...
A possible connection between the energy W of the vacuum fluctuations of quantum fields and gravity ...
We consider and review the emergence of singular field fluctuations or energy densities at sharp bou...
We consider the zero-point field fluctuations, and the related field energy densities, inside a one-...
Nonlinearities in the dispersion relations associated with different interactions designs, boundary ...
The energy density of the vacuum is still one of the unsolved questions in physics. Principally it s...
In Dirac's hole theory the vacuum state is generally believed to be the state of minimum energy. It ...
We present and study a possible mechanism of extracting energies from the vacuum by external classic...
AbstractThe regularized vacuum energy (or energy density) of a quantum field subjected to static ext...
© 2019 by the authors. The problem of an enormously large energy density of the quantum vacuum is di...
Relativistic quantum degrees of freedom in their vacuum state endow geometric backgrounds with an en...
We consider a massless scalar field in a one-dimensional cavity with one fixed and one mobile wall. ...
The vacuum energies corresponding to massive Dirac fields with the boundary conditions of the MIT ba...
The quantum vacuum consists of virtual particles randomly appearing and disappearing in free space. ...