Path Integral Approach to the Dynamic Casimir Effect with Fluctuating Boundaries

ArXiv quant-ph/9802017 (1998)

Authors:

Ramin Golestanian, Mehran Kardar

Abstract:

A path integral formulation is developed for the dynamic Casimir effect. It allows us to study arbitrary deformations in space and time of the perfectly reflecting (conducting) boundaries of a cavity. The mechanical response of the intervening vacuum is calculated to linear order in the frequency-wavevector plane, using which a plethora of interesting phenomena can be studied. For a single corrugated plate we find a correction to mass at low frequencies, and an effective shear viscosity at high frequencies that are both anisotropic. The anisotropy is set by the wavevector of the corrugation. For two plates, the mass renormalization is modified by a function of the ratio between the separation of the plates and the wave-length of corrugations. The dissipation rate is not modified for frequencies below the lowest optical mode of the cavity, and there is a resonant dissipation for all frequencies greater than that. In this regime, a divergence in the response function implies that such high frequency deformation modes of the cavity can not be excited by any macroscopic external forces. This phenomenon is intimately related to resonant particle creation. For particular examples of two corrugated plates that are stationary, or moving uniformly in the lateral directions, Josephson-like effects are observed. For capillary waves on the surface of mercury a renormalization to surface tension, and sound velocity is obtained.

Lattice Boltzmann simulations of lamellar and droplet phases

(1998)

Authors:

G Gonnella, E Orlandini, JM Yeomans

Temperature Corrections to Conformal Field Theory

(1998)

Authors:

Fabian HL Essler, Vladimir E Korepin, Franck T Latremoliere

Ageing in frustrated magnets

NATO ADV SCI I E-APP 349 (1998) 343-366

Abstract:

An ageing phenomenon profoundly affects the dynamic physical properties of spin glasses and other frustrated magnetic systems. The dynamics of spin glasses including the ageing phenomenon is first recapitulated followed by a brief description of the dynamics and an analogous ageing behaviour that occurs in: the ferromagnetic phase of re-entrant spin glasses, concentrated magnetic particle systems and some diluted antiferromagnets at the percolation limit.

An introduction to the scientific programme of the school

NATO ADV SCI I E-APP 349 (1998) 1-4