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In modern physics, the classical vacuum of tranquil nothingness has
been replaced by a quantum vacuum with fluctuations of measurable
consequence. In The Quantum Vacuum, Peter Milonni describes the
concept of the vacuum in quantum physics with an emphasis on
quantum electrodynamics. He elucidates in depth and detail the role
of the vacuum electromagnetic field in spontaneous emission, the
Lamb shift, van der Waals, and Casimir forces, and a variety of
other phenomena, some of which are of technological as well as
purely scientific importance.
This informative text also provides an introduction based on
fundamental vacuum processes to the ideas of relativistic quantum
electrodynamics and quantum field theory, including renormalization
and Feynman diagrams. Experimental as well as theoreticalaspects of
the quantum vacuum are described, and in most cases details of
mathematical derivations are included.
Chapter 1 of The Quantum Vacuum - published in advance in "The
American Journal of Physics" (1991)-was later selected by readers
as one of the Most Memorable papers ever published in the 60-year
history of the journal. This chapter provides anexcellent beginning
of the book, introducing a wealth of information of historical
interest, the results of which are carefully woven into subsequent
chapters to form a coherent whole.
Key Features
* Does not assume that the reader has taken advanced graduate
courses, making the text accessible to beginning graduate
students
* Emphasizes the basic physical ideas rather than the formal,
mathematical aspects of the subject
* Provides a careful and thorough treatment of Casimir and van der
Waals forces at a level of detail not found in any other book on
this topic
* Clearly presents mathematical derivations
This is an introduction to the quantum theory of light and its
broad implications and applications. A significant part of the book
covers material with direct relevance to current basic and applied
research, such as quantum fluctuations and their role in laser
physics and the theory of forces between macroscopic bodies
(Casimir effects). The book includes numerous historical sidelights
throughout, and approximately seventy exercises. The book provides
detailed expositions of the theory with emphasis on general
physical principles. Foundational topics in classical and quantum
electrodynamics are addressed in the first half of the book,
including the semiclassical theory of atom-field interactions, the
quantization of the electromagnetic field in dispersive and
dissipative media, uncertainty relations, and spontaneous emission.
The second half begins with a chapter on the Jaynes-Cummings model,
dressed states, and some distinctly quantum-mechanical features of
atom-field interactions, and includes discussion of entanglement,
the no-cloning theorem, von Neumann's proof concerning hidden
variable theories, Bell's theorem, and tests of Bell inequalities.
The last two chapters focus on quantum fluctuations and
fluctuation-dissipation relations, beginning with Brownian motion,
the Fokker-Planck equation, and classical and quantum Langevin
equations. Detailed calculations are presented for the laser
linewidth, spontaneous emission noise, photon statistics of linear
amplifiers and attenuators, and other phenomena. Van der Waals
interactions, Casimir forces, the Lifshitz theory of molecular
forces between macroscopic media, and the many-body theory of such
forces based on dyadic Green functions are analyzed from the
perspective of Langevin noise, vacuum field fluctuations, and
zero-point energy.
http://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/0323
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