The Classical
Vacuum
Zero-Point
Energy
by Timothy H. Boyer
Scientific American Magazine,
Aug. 1985, pp 70-78.
from
TheInstituteForNewEnergy Website
It is
not empty.
Even when all
matter and heat radiation have been removed from a region of space,
the vacuum of
classical physics remains filled with a distinctive pattern of
electromagnetic fields
Aristotle and his followers believed no
region of space could be totally empty: This notion that "nature
abhors a vacuum" was rejected in the scientific revolution of the
17th century; ironically, though, modern physics has come to hold a
similar view. Today there is no doubt that a region of space can be
emptied of ordinary matter, at least in principle. In the modern
view, however, a region of vacuum is far from being empty or
featureless. It has a complex structure, which cannot be eliminated
by any conceivable means.
This use of words may seem puzzling. If the vacuum is not empty, how
can it be called a vacuum? Physicists today define the vacuum as
whatever is left in a region of space when it has been emptied of
everything that can possibly be removed from it by experimental
means. The vacuum is the experimentally attainable void. Obviously a
first step in creating a region of vacuum is to eliminate all
visible matter, such as solids and liquids. Gases must also be
removed. When all matter has been excluded, however, space is not
empty; it remains filled with electromagnetic radiation. A part of
the radiation is thermal, and it can be removed by cooling, but
another component of the radiation has a subtler origin. Even if the
temperature of a vacuum could be reduced to absolute zero, a pattern
of fluctuating electromagnetic waves would persist. This residual
radiation, which has been analyzed only in recent years, is an
inherent feature of the vacuum, and it cannot be suppressed.
A full account of the contemporary theory of the vacuum would have
to include the ideas of quantum mechanics, which are curious indeed.
For example, it would be necessary to describe the spontaneous
creation of matter and antimatter from the vacuum. Nevertheless,
some of the remarkable properties of the vacuum do not depend at all
on the peculiar logic of the quantum theory, and they can best be
understood in a classical description (one that ignores quantum
effects). Accordingly I shall discuss the vacuum entirely in terms
of classical ideas. Even in the comparatively simple world of
classical physics the vacuum is amply strange.
The Discovery
of the Vacuum
Aristotle’s doctrine that a vacuum is physically impossible was
overthrown in the 17th century. The crucial development was the
invention of the barometer in 1644 by Evangelista Torricelli, who
had been secretary to Galileo. Torricelli poured mercury into a
glass tube closed at one end and then inverted the tube, with the
open end in a vessel filled with mercury. The column of liquid fell
to a height of about 30 inches above the level of the mercury in the
vessel, leaving a space at the top of the tube. The space was
clearly empty of any visible matter; Torricelli proposed that it was
also free of gas and so was a region of vacuum. A lively controversy
ensued between supporters of the Aristotelian view and those who
believed Torricelli had indeed created a vacuum. A few years later
Blaise Pascal supervised a series of ingenious experiments,
all tending to confirm Torricelli’s hypothesis.
In the following decades experiments with the vacuum had a great
vogue. The best-remembered of these demonstrations is one conducted
by Otto von Guericke, the burgomaster of Magdeburg, who made
a globe from two copper hemispheres and evacuated the space within.
Two teams of eight draft horses were unable to separate the
hemispheres. Other experiments of the era were less spectacular but
perhaps more informative. For example, they led to the discovery
that a vacuum transmits light but not sound.
[Picture.]
MAGDEBURG HEMISPHERES made in 1654 by Otto von Guericke
demonstrated the existence of the vacuum, When the hemispheres were
put together and the air was pulled out, two teams of eight draft
horses could not separate them. The apparatus is now in the
Deutsches Museum in Munich.
The understanding of the vacuum changed again in the 19th century.
The nature of the change can be illustrated by a thought experiment
to be done with imaginary ideal apparatus.
Suppose one had a piston and cylinder machined so perfectly that the
piston could move freely and yet nothing could leak past it.
Initially the piston is at the closed end of the cylinder and there
is no vacant space at all. When a steady force is applied to
withdraw the piston against the pressure of the air outside, the
space developed between the piston and the end of the cylinder is a
region of vacuum. If the piston is immediately released, it moves
back into the cylinder, eliminating the vacuum space. If the piston
is withdrawn and held for some time at room temperature, however,
the result is quite different. External air pressure pushes on the
piston, tending to restore the original configuration. Nevertheless,
the piston does not go all the way back into the cylinder, even if
additional force is applied. Evidently something is inside the
cylinder. What appeared to be an empty space is not empty after the
wait.
The physicists of the 19th century were able to explain this curious
result. During the period when the piston was withdrawn the walls of
the cylinder were emitting heat radiation into the vacuum region.
When the piston was forced back in, the radiation was compressed.
Thermal radiation responds to compression much as a gas does: both
the pressure and the temperature rise. Thus the compressed radiation
exerts a force opposing the reinsertion of the piston. The piston
and cylinder could be closed again only if one waited long enough
for the higher-temperature radiation to be reabsorbed by the walls
of the cylinder.
The form of thermal radiation is intimately connected with the
structure of the vacuum in classical physics. Nothing in my
discussion so far has indicated that this should be so, and indeed
the physicists of the 19th century were unaware of the connection.
The
Thermal Spectrum
Thermal radiation consists of electromagnetic fields that fluctuate
in the most random way possible. Paradoxically this maximum
randomness gives the radiation great statistical regularity. Under
conditions of thermal equilibrium, in which the temperature is
uniform everywhere, the radiation is both homogeneous and isotropic:
its properties are the same at every point in space and in every
direction. An instrument capable of measuring any property of the
radiation would give the same reading no matter where it was placed
and what direction it was pointed in.
The one physical quantity that determines the character of thermal
radiation is its temperature. In 1879 the Austrian physicist Josef
Stefan investigated the total energy density (or energy per unit
volume) of thermal radiation and, on the basis of some preliminary
experiments suggested that the energy density varies as the fourth
power of the absolute temperature. Five years later Stefan’s student
Ludwig Boltzmann found the same relation through a
theoretical analysis.
The temperature of thermal radiation determines not only its total
energy density but also its spectrum, that is, the curve defining
the amount of radiant energy at each frequency. The effect of
temperature on the thermal spectrum is familiar from everyday
experience; as an object is heated it first glows red and then white
or even blue as the spectrum comes to be dominated by progressively
higher frequencies. The thermal spectrum is not a monochromatic one,
however; a red-hot poker emits radiation most strongly at
frequencies corresponding to red light, but it also gives off lesser
quantities of radiation at all higher and lower frequencies.
The shape of the thermal spectrum and its relation to temperature
were explored experimentally in the last years of the 19th century,
but the attempt to formulate a consistent theoretical explanation
met with only limited success. The aim was to find a mathematical
expression that would give the intensity of the radiation as a
function of the frequency and the temperature. In other words, given
some specified temperature, the expression had to predict the
intensity of radiation that would be measured at any chosen
frequency.
A sophisticated classical analysis of the thermal spectrum was given
by the German physicist Wilhelm Wien in 1893. Wien based his
analysis on a thought experiment much like the one described above,
but with the added provision that the cylinder be perfectly
insulated so that no heat could be gained or lost. Wien calculated
the change in the spectrum that would be brought about by an
infinitesimal change in the internal volume of the cylinder. From
this calculation he was able to deduce that the mathematical
expression describing the spectrum must have two factors, which are
multiplied to yield the intensity at a given frequency and
temperature. One factor is the cube of the frequency. The second
factor is a function of the absolute temperature divided by the
frequency, but Wien was not able to determine the correct form of
the function. (He made a proposal, but it was soon shown to be
wrong.)
[Figure.]
CREATION OF A VACUUM proceeds in stages that parallel the historical
development of ideas about the vacuum. In the 17th century (a) it
was thought a totally empty volume of space could be created by
removing all matter, and in particular all gases. Late in the 19th
century (6) it became apparent that such a region still contains
thermal radiation, but it seemed the radiation might be eliminated
by cooling. Since then both theory and experiment have shown there
is nonthermal radiation in the vacuum (c), and it would persist even
if the temperature could be lowered to absolute zero. It is called
zero-point radiation.
Classical
Electron Theory
The mathematical function needed to describe the thermal spectrum
was suggested by Max Planck in 1900. Planck emphasized that
an understanding of thermal radiation required the introduction of a
new fundamental constant, now called Planck’s constant, with a value
of 6.26 x 10**(-27) erg-second. In the course of his struggle to
explain his function for the thermal spectrum Planck launched the
quantum theory. The start of quantum physics, however, did not mark
the end of the story of classical physics.
Stefan’s and Boltzmann’s proposal that the total energy density of
the thermal radiation is proportional to the fourth power of the
temperature implies that the energy density falls to zero at a
temperature of absolute zero. The thermal radiation simply
disappears at zero temperature. The possibility of eliminating all
thermal radiation led to a conception of the classical vacuum that
was an extension of the 17th-century view. A perfect vacuum was
still a totally empty region of space, but to attain this state one
had to remove not only all visible matter and all gas but also all
electromagnetic radiation. The last requirement could be met in
principle by cooling the region to absolute zero.
This conception of the vacuum within classical physics was embodied
in the fundamental physical theory of the time, which has since come
to be known as classical electron theory. It views electrons as
point-like particles whose only properties are mass and electric
charge. They can be set in motion by electric and magnetic fields,
and their motion in turn gives rise to such fields. (An electron in
steady oscillation, for example, radiates electromagnetic waves at
the frequency of oscillation.) The interactions between particles
and fields are accounted for by Newton’s laws of motion and by James
Clerk Maxwell’s equations of electromagnetism. In addition certain
boundary conditions must be specified if the theory is to make
definite predictions. Maxwell’s equations describe how an
electromagnetic field changes from place to place and from moment to
moment, but to calculate the actual value of the field one must know
the initial, or boundary, values of the field, which provide a
baseline for all subsequent changes.
It is through the choice of initial conditions that the nature of
the vacuum enters classical electron theory. Since in the
19th-century view the vacuum was empty of all radiation, the initial
conditions set on Maxwell’s equations were the absence of electric
and magnetic radiation. Roughly speaking, the 19th-century version
of classical electron theory assumed that at some time in the
distant past the universe contained matter (electrons) but no
radiation. All electromagnetic radiation evolved from the
acceleration of electric charges.
The Casimir
Effect
Classical electron theory remains a viable field of investigation
today, but it has taken a new form in the 20th century. The need for
a revision is easily seen from an experiment proposed in 1948 by
Hendrik B. G. Casimir of the Philips Research Laboratories in
the Netherlands. Casimir analyzed the forces that would act on two
electrically conducting, parallel plates mounted a small distance
apart in a vacuum. If the plates carry an electric charge, the laws
of elementary electrostatics predict a force between them, but
Casimir considered the case in which the plates are uncharged. Even
then a force can arise from electromagnetic radiation surrounding
the plates. The origin of this force is not immediately obvious, but
a mechanical analogy serves to make it clear.
Suppose a smooth cord is threaded snuggly through holes in two wood
blocks, as in the upper illustration on the next page. The cord is
not tied to the blocks, and so at rest it neither pushes them apart
nor pulls them together. Nevertheless, if the part of the cord
between the blocks is made to vibrate transversely, a force acts on
the blocks and they tend to slide along the cord away from each
other. The force arises because transverse motion of the cord is not
possible where it passes through a block, and so waves in the cord
are reflected there. When a wave is reflected, some of its momentum
is transferred to the reflector
The situation in Casimir’s proposed experiment is similar. The metal
plates are analogous to the wood blocks, and the fluctuating
electric and magnetic radiation fields represent the vibrating cord.
The analogue of the hole in the wood block is the conducting quality
of the metal plates; just as waves on the cord are reflected by the
block, so electromagnetic waves are reflected by a conductor. In
this case there is radiation on both sides of each plate, and thus
the forces tend to cancel. The cancellation is not exact, however; a
small residual force remains. The force is directly proportional to
the area of the plates and also depends on both the separation
between the plates and the spectrum of the fluctuating
electromagnetic radiation.
[Figure.]
IDEAL PISTON AND CYLINDER provide the apparatus for a thought
experiment revealing the presence of thermal radiation. The piston
is initially at the closed end of the cylinder, leaving no free
space; then it is withdrawn partway and held in this position for
some time at room temperature. The space enclosed would seem to be a
vacuum, and yet when the piston is released, it does not return to
its initial position; indeed, it cannot be pushed all tile way back
into the cylinder even with additional force. While the piston was
held in the open position tile walls of the cavity emitted thermal
radiation with a spectrum determined by the temperature. An attempt
to reinsert the piston compresses the radiation, raising its
temperature and tiles altering its spectrum. The hotter radiation
opposes the compression.
So far this analysis is wholly consistent with the 19th-century view
of the vacuum. The force acting on the plates is attributed to
fluctuating thermal radiation. When the temperatures reduced to
absolute zero, both the thermal radiation and the force between. the
plates should disappear.
Experiment contradicts this prediction. In 1958 the Dutch physicist
M. J· Sparnaay carried out a series of experiments based on
Casimir’s proposal and found that the force did not approach zero
when the thermal radiation was reduced to low intensity. Instead
there was a residual attractive force that would persist even at
absolute zero.
The residual force is directly proportional to the area of the
plates and inversely proportional to the fourth power of their
separation; the constant of proportionality is 1.3 x 10**(-18)
erg-centimeter. Although such a force is small, it is measurable if
the plates are sufficiently close together. For plates with an area
of one square centimeter separated by 0.5 micrometer the Casimir
force is equivalent to the weight of 0.2 milligram.
Whatever the magnitude of the Casimir effect, its very existence
indicates that there is something fundamentally wrong with the
19th-century idea of the classical vacuum. If one is to fit
classical theory with experiment, then even at zero temperature the
classical vacuum cannot be completely empty; it must be filled with
the classical electromagnetic fields responsible for the attractive
force Sparnaay measured. Those vacuum fields are now referred to as
classical electromagnetic zero-point radiation.
[Figure.]
CASIMIR EFFECT demonstrates the existence of electromagnetic fields
in the vacuum. Two metal plates in a vacuum chamber are mounted
parallel to each other and a small distance apart. Because the
plates are conducting, they reflect electromagnetic waves; for a
wave to be reflected there must be a node of the electric field - a
point of zero electric amplitude - at the surface of the plate. The
resulting arrangement of the waves gives rise to a force of
attraction. The origin of the force can be understood in part
through a mechanical analogy. If a cord threaded through holes in
two wood blocks is made to vibrate, waves is the cord are reflected
at tire holes and generate forces on the blocks. The forces on a
single block act in opposite directions, but a small net force
remains. Its magnitude and direction depend on the separation
between the blocks and the spectrum of waves along the cord.
FORCE OBSERVED IN THE CASIMIR EXPERIMENT has two components. At high
temperature thermal radiation gives rise to a force directly
proportional to the temperature and inversely proportional to the
cube of the distance between the plates. This force disappears at
absolute zero, as the thermal radiation itself does. The force
associated with the zero-point radiation is independent of
temperature and inversely proportional to the fourth power of the
distance between the plates. The forces shown are for plates with an
area of one square centimeter; the thermal force is an approximation
valid at high temperature.
The Zero-Point
Spectrum
What are the characteristics of the zero-point radiation in the
classical vacuum? Much can be deduced from the fact that it exists
in a vacuum: it must conform to accepted basic ideas about the
nature of the vacuum. For example, it seems essential that the
vacuum define no special places or directions, no landmarks in space
or time; it should look the same at all positions and in all
directions. Hence the zero-point radiation, like thermal radiation,
must be homogeneous and isotropic. Furthermore, the vacuum should
not define any special velocity through space; it. should look the
same to any two observers no matter what their velocity is with
respect to each other, provided the velocity is constant. This last
requirement is expressed by saying the zero-point radiation must be
invariant with respect to Lorentz transformation. (The
Lorentz transformation, named for the Dutch physicist H. A.
Lorentz, is a conversion from one constant-velocity frame of
reference to another, taking into account that the speed of light is
the same in all frames of reference.)
[Figure.]
LORENTZ INVARIANCE of the zero-point radiation ensures that the
vacuum looks the same to observers moving through it at different
velocities, provided each observer’s velocity is constant. The
Lorentz transformation relates frames of reference that differ in
velocity; for radiation to be Lorentz-invariant its spectrum must be
unchanged by the transformation. The effect of motion on the
spectrum is illustrated by an observer surrounded by peculiar
traffic signals, which always indicate the intensity of the
zero-point radiation at three frequencies, namely those of red,
green and blue light, Suppose an observer at rest with respect to
the array of signals finds they all show green (a), meaning that all
the zero-point radiation is concentrated in the green part of the
electromagnetic spectrum. If the observer then begins to move (b),
the pattern is altered by the Doppler effect: the signals ahead
appear blue and those behind red. The Lorentz transformation also
makes the approaching signals brighter and the receding ones dimmer.
It turns out that ’ only one spectral form has the property of
Lorentz invariance: the intensity must be proportional to the cube
of the frequency. When the traffic signals are illuminated according
to this rule, an observer at rest (c) and an observer in motion (d)
see the same pattern.
The requirement of Lorentz invariance is a serious
constraint. A railroad passenger may be momentarily unsure whether
his own train or the one on the next track is moving relative to the
earth, but the ambiguity can be resolved simply by looking at some
landmark known to be fixed. Lorentz invariance implies that there
are no such landmarks in the vacuum and that no experiment could
ever reveal an observer’s velocity with respect to the background of
zero-point radiation. To meet this condition the spectrum of the
radiation must have quite specific properties.
Suppose for the moment that the zero-point radiation, as perceived
by some observer, were all in the region of the electromagnetic
spectrum corresponding to green light. No matter where the observer
stood and no matter in what direction he looked, the vacuum would
appear to be filled with uniform green radiation. Such a spectrum
satisfies the requirements of homogeneity and isotropy for this one
observer, but now suppose there is another observer moving toward
the first one at a constant speed. Because of the Doppler effect,
the moving observer would see the radiation in front of him shifted
toward the blue end of the spectrum and the radiation behind him
shifted toward the red end. The Lorentz transformation also
alters the intensity of the radiation: it would be brighter in front
and dimmer behind. Thus the radiation does not look the same to both
observers; it is isotropic to one but not to the other.
It turns out that the zero-point spectrum can have only one possible
shape if the radiation is to be Lorentz-invariant. The intensity of
the radiation at any frequency must be proportional to the cube of
that frequency. A spectrum defined by such a cubic curve is the same
for all unaccelerated observers, no matter what their velocity;
moreover, it is the only spectrum that has this property.
[Figure.]
ZERO-POINT SPECTRUM is independent of the observer’s velocity
because of compensating changes in frequency and intensity. When an
observer is approaching a source of radiation, all frequencies are
shifted to higher values and all intensities are increased; moving
away from the source has the opposite effect. Thus a spectrum that
has a peak in the green region for a stationary observer has a
larger blue peak for so approaching observer and a smaller red peak
for a receding observer. The cubic curve that defines the zero-point
spectrum balances the shifts in frequency and intensity. Light that
appears green in the stationary frame of reference becomes blue to
an approaching observer, but its intensity matches that of the blue
light seen by an observer at rest. By the same token, green light is
shifted to red frequencies for a receding observer, but its
intensity is diminished correspondingly.
One immediate objection might be made to the cubic form of the
zero-point spectrum: because the intensity of the radiation
increases steadily at higher frequencies, the spectrum predicts an
infinite energy density for the vacuum. In the 19th century such a
prediction might well have been considered a fatal flaw, but since
the 1940’s infinities have turned up in several areas of physics,
and methods have been developed for dealing with them. In this case
the infinite energy is confronted directly only in the realm of
gravitational forces. All other calculations are based on changes or
differences in energy, which are invariably finite.
If the universe is permeated by classical zero-point radiation, one
might suppose it would make its presence known in phenomena less
subtle than the Casimir effect. For example, one might think
it would alter the outcome of the piston-and-cylinder experiment by
resisting the insertion of the piston even after all thermal
radiation had been eliminated.
Analysis indicates otherwise. Under equilibrium conditions, when no
external force is applied to the piston, there is radiation both
inside and outside the cylinder, and the radiation pressures acting
on the piston are balanced. This balance holds for both thermal and
zero-point radiation. When the piston is pushed into the cylinder,
the radiation is compressed. Wien’s calculation of the change in the
spectrum as a result of a change in volume indicates that the
thermal radiation resists such compression; it increases in
temperature and exerts a greater pressure against the piston. When
the same analysis is made for the zero-point radiation, however, the
result is different: the zero-point spectrum does not change at all
in response to compression. Indeed, a spectrum described by a cubic
curve is the only one that has this remarkable property.
The other experiment in which the cubic zero-point spectrum should
be checked is the Casimir effect itself. A theoretical
calculation based on the spectrum predicts a force between the
plates directly proportional to their area and inversely
proportional to the fourth power of their separation, in agreement
with Sparnaay’s results. Again it can be shown that the
spectrum is unique in supporting this prediction; no other spectral
curve yields an inverse-fourth-power dependence on distance.
The New
Classical Electron Theory
The statement that a spectrum described by a cubic curve is unique
refers only to the shape of the curve; actually there are infinitely
many curves with the same shape but different scales. In all the
curves the intensity of the radiation is proportional to the cube of
the frequency, but the magnitude of the intensity in each spectrum
depends on a constant, which sets the scale of the curve.
The value of the constant cannot be calculated theoretically, but
Sparnaay’s measurement of the force in the Casimir effect allows
the value to be determined from experiment. After some preliminary
algebraic manipulation it is found that the constant is equal to 3.3
x 10**(-27) erg-second, a magnitude corresponding to one-half of
Planck’s constant. Thus Planck’s constant, the hallmark of all
quantum physics, appears in a purely classical context.
The introduction of classical zero-point radiation in the vacuum
mandates an important change in classical electron theory. The
revised version of the theory is still based on Newton’s laws of
motion for the electrons and Maxwell’s equations for the
electromagnetic field, but the boundary conditions imposed on
Maxwell’s equations must be altered. No longer is the vacuum empty
of all electromagnetic fields; it is now filled with randomly
fluctuating fields having the zero-point spectrum. The modified
theory is called classical electron theory with classical
electromagnetic zero-point radiation, a name often shortened to
stochastic electrodynamics.
The altered boundary conditions change the predictions of the
theory. The changes can be understood by considering one of the
favorite models of modern physics: a harmonic oscillator made up of
an electron attached to a perfectly elastic and frictionless spring.
This imaginary mechanical system is to be set up in the classical
vacuum. If the spring is stretched and then released, the electron
oscillates about its equilibrium position and gives off
electromagnetic radiation at the frequency of oscillation.
[Figure.]
HARMONIC OSCILLATOR reveals the effects of zero-point radiation on
matter. The oscillator consists of all electron attached to an
ideal, frictionless spring. When the electron is set in motion, it
oscillates about its point of equilibrium, emitting electromagnetic
radiation at the frequency of oscillation. The radiation dissipates
energy, and so in the absence of zero-point radiation and at a
temperature of absolute zero the electron eventually comes to rest.
Actually zero-point radiation continually imparts random impulses to
the electron, so that it never comes to a complete stop. Zero-point
radiation gives the oscillator an average energy equal to the
frequency of oscillation multiplied by one-half of Planck’s
constant.
The harmonic oscillator is a convenient model because the
motion of the electron is readily calculated. Under the older
version of classical electron theory just two forces act on the
electron: the restoring force from the spring and a reaction force
arising from the emission of radiation. Because the reaction force
is directed opposite to the electron’s motion, the theory predicts
that the oscillations will be steadily damped and the electron will
eventually come to rest. In the new version of classical electron
theory, however, the zero-point radiation provides an additional
force on the electron. The charged particle is continually buffeted
by the randomly fluctuating fields of the zero-point radiation, so
that it never comes to rest. It turns out the harmonic oscillator
retains an average energy related to the zero-point spectrum, namely
one-half of Planck’s constant multiplied by the frequency of
oscillation.
Up to now the classical vacuum has been described from the point of
view of an observer at rest or moving with constant velocity. The
consequences of zero-point radiation are even more remarkable for an
accelerated observer, that is, one whose velocity is changing in
magnitude or direction.
Effects
of Acceleration
Consider an observer in a rocket continuously accelerating with
respect to some frame of reference that can be regarded as fixed,
such as the background of distant stars. What does the classical
vacuum look like to the rocket-borne observer? To find out, one must
perform a mathematical transformation from the fixed frame of
reference to the accelerated one. The Lorentz transformation
mediates between frames that differ in velocity, but the situation
is more complex here because the velocity of the accelerated
observer is continuously changing. By carrying out Lorentz
transformations over some time interval, however, the vacuum
observed from the rocket can be determined.
One might guess that the spectrum for an accelerated observer would
no longer be isotropic, and in particular that some difference would
be detected between the forward and the backward directions. The
spectrum might also, be predicted to change as the acceleration
continued. In fact the spectrum remains homogeneous and isotropic,
and no change is observed as long as the rate of acceleration itself
does not change. Nevertheless, the spectrum is not the one seen by
an unaccelerated observer. At any given frequency the intensity of
the radiation is greater in the accelerated frame than it is in the
frame at rest.
The form of the classical electromagnetic spectrum seen by an
accelerated observer is not one immediately familiar to physicists,
but it can be interpreted by analyzing the motion of a harmonic
oscillator carried along in the rocket. The equation of motion for
the accelerated oscillator is much like the one valid in a fixed
frame of reference. There are two differences: the
radiation-reaction force has a new term proportional to the square
of the acceleration, and the oscillator is exposed to a new spectrum
of random radiation associated with the acceleration. The effect of
these changes is to increase the average energy above the energy
associated with the zero-point motion. In other words, when an
oscillator is accelerated, it jiggles more vigorously than it would
if it were at rest in the vacuum.
One way of understanding the effect of acceleration on the harmonic
oscillator is to ask what additional electromagnetic spectrum could
be added to the zero-point radiation to cause the extra motion. To
answer this question one can turn to the equivalence principle on
which Einstein founded his theory of gravitation. The principle
states that an observer in a small laboratory supported in a
gravitational field makes exactly the same measurements as an
observer in a small accelerating rocket. The laws of thermodynamics
are found to hold in a gravitational field.
From the equivalence principle one
therefore expects the laws of thermodynamics to hold in an
accelerating rocket. There is then only one possible equilibrium
spectrum that can be added to the zero-point radiation: the
additional radiation must have a thermal spectrum. With any other
spectrum the oscillator would not be in thermal equilibrium with its
surroundings, and so it could serve as the basis of a
perpetual-motion machine. By this route one is led to a remarkable
conclusion: a physical system accelerated through the vacuum has the
same equilibrium properties as an unaccelerated system immersed in
thermal radiation at a temperature above absolute zero.
The mathematical relation connecting acceleration and temperature
was found in about 1976 by William G. Unruh of the University
of British Columbia and P.C.W. Davies of the University of
Newcastle upon Tyne. The effective spectrum seen by an observer
accelerated through the vacuum is the sum of two parts. One part is
the zero-point radiation; the other is the spectrum of thermal
radiation deduced by Planck in 1900. Planck was able to explain the
form of that curve only by introducing quantum-mechanical ideas,
which he did with some reluctance; it now turns out the curve can be
derived from an entirely classical analysis of radiation in the
vacuum.
At least one more intriguing result arises from this line of
inquiry. If one again invokes the equivalence principle relating an
observer in a gravitational field with an accelerating observer, one
concludes that there is a minimum attainable temperature in a
gravitational field. This limit is an absolute one, quite apart from
any practical difficulties of reaching low temperatures. At the
surface of the earth the limit is 4 x 10**(-20) degree Kelvin, far
beyond the capabilities of real refrigerators but nonetheless
greater than zero.
The discovery of a connection between thermal radiation and the
structure of the classical vacuum reveals an unexpected unity in the
laws of physics, but it also complicates our view of what was once
considered mere empty space. Even with its pattern of electric and
magnetic fields in continual fluctuation, the vacuum remains the
simplest state of nature. But perhaps this statement reflects more
on the subtlety of nature than it does on the simplicity of the
vacuum.
[Figure.]
EFFECT OF ACCELERATION through tire vacuum is to change the spectrum
of observed radiation. At a temperature of absolute zero a harmonic
oscillator in a frame of reference at rest or moving with constant
velocity is subject only to zero-point oscillations. In an
accelerated frame the oscillator responds as if it were at a
temperature greater than zero.
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