McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Informal Pizza Seminar

Effective actions and precision calculations of the Casimir effect

Yashar Aghababaie

McGill

The Casimir effect is the attractive force exerted between two parallel conducting plates. This force is a physical effect mediated by quantum fluctuations of the electromagnetic field. Calculations of precision one-loop corrections to this effect have recently become interesting because of advances in experimental methods, and because of the parellels with brane-world models. Surprisingly, the result of this calculation has attracted controversy, with some groups even claiming that effective field theory fails in this context. In this talk I will describe the effective operators required to describe physics in the presence of the parallel conducting plates. The matching calculation will be performed with a fun little electrostatics problem. I will then show that this effective theory correctly reproduces the correction to the Casimir effect.

Tuesday, March 2nd 2004, 13:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, room 326