Spectroscopic Effects of Velocity-Dependent Casimir-Polder Interactions Induced by Parallel Plates

Abstract

Casimir-Polder interactions cause energy and momentum exchange between microscopic and macroscopic bodies, a process mediated by quantum fluctuations in the coupled matter-electromagnetic field system. The dynamics of such effects are yet to be experimentally investigated due to the dominance of static effects at currently attainable atomic velocities. However, Y. Guo and Z. Jacob [Opt. Express, 22:26193-26202, 2014] have proposed a non-static two-plate set-up where quantum fluctuation mediated effects have a strong velocity-dependent resonance, leading to a giant friction force on the plates. Here a more easily realisable set-up, a moving atom between two stationary plates, is analysed within a QED framework to establish the spectroscopic Casimir-Polder effects on the atom, and their velocity dependence. While no large velocity-dependent enhancement is found, expressions for the plate-induced spectroscopic effects on the atom were found, and further shown to be equivalent to the Doppler-shifted static result within certain velocity constraints. A numerical analysis investigates the behaviour of this system for the well studied case of the 6D3/2→ 7P1/2 transition in 133Cs interacting with sapphire plates.

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