English

Moving Atom-Field Interaction: Correction to Casimir-Polder Effect from Coherent Back-action

Quantum Physics 2009-11-10 v3

Abstract

The Casimir-Polder force is an attractive force between a polarizable atom and a conducting or dielectric boundary. Its original computation was in terms of the Lamb shift of the atomic ground state in an electromagnetic field (EMF) modified by boundary conditions along the wall and assuming a stationary atom. We calculate the corrections to this force due to a moving atom, demanding maximal preservation of entanglement generated by the moving atom-conducting wall system. We do this by using non-perturbative path integral techniques which allow for coherent back-action and thus can treat non-Markovian processes. We recompute the atom-wall force for a conducting boundary by allowing the bare atom-EMF ground state to evolve (or self-dress) into the interacting ground state. We find a clear distinction between the cases of stationary and adiabatic motions. Our result for the retardation correction for adiabatic motion is up to twice as much as that computed for stationary atoms. We give physical interpretations of both the stationary and adiabatic atom-wall forces in terms of alteration of the virtual photon cloud surrounding the atom by the wall and the Doppler effect.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.quant-ph/0302004,
  title  = {Moving Atom-Field Interaction: Correction to Casimir-Polder Effect from Coherent Back-action},
  author = {S. Shresta and B. L. Hu and N. G. Phillips},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:quant-ph/0302004},
  year   = {2009}
}

Comments

16 pages, 2 figures, clarified discussions; to appear in Phys. Rev. A