English

Casimir forces in the time domain II: Applications

Quantum Physics 2010-02-01 v2

Abstract

Our preceding paper introduced a method to compute Casimir forces in arbitrary geometries and for arbitrary materials that was based on a finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) scheme. In this manuscript, we focus on the efficient implementation of our method for geometries of practical interest and extend our previous proof-of-concept algorithm in one dimension to problems in two and three dimensions, introducing a number of new optimizations. We consider Casimir piston-like problems with nonmonotonic and monotonic force dependence on sidewall separation, both for previously solved geometries to validate our method and also for new geometries involving magnetic sidewalls and/or cylindrical pistons. We include realistic dielectric materials to calculate the force between suspended silicon waveguides or on a suspended membrane with periodic grooves, also demonstrating the application of PML absorbing boundaries and/or periodic boundaries. In addition we apply this method to a realizable three-dimensional system in which a silica sphere is stably suspended in a fluid above an indented metallic substrate. More generally, the method allows off-the-shelf FDTD software, already supporting a wide variety of materials (including dielectric, magnetic, and even anisotropic materials) and boundary conditions, to be exploited for the Casimir problem.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.0906.5170,
  title  = {Casimir forces in the time domain II: Applications},
  author = {Alexander P. McCauley and Alejandro W. Rodriguez and John D. Joannopoulos and Steven G. Johnson},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0906.5170},
  year   = {2010}
}

Comments

11 pages, 12 figures. Includes additional examples (dispersive materials and fully three-dimensional systems)

R2 v1 2026-06-21T13:18:44.420Z