Zero-Point Energy Density at the Origin of the Vacuum Permittivity and Photon Propagation Time Fluctuation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Statistics for Virtual Pairs
2.1. Density of Modes for a Particle in a Box
2.2. Mode Energy
2.3. Statistics
- The grand canonical ensemble ( fixed), where is the chemical potential: The system can exchange energy and particles with a reservoir, so that various possible states of the system can differ in both their total energy and the total number of particles.
- The canonical ensemble ( fixed): The system can exchange energy with the heat bath, so that the states of the system will differ in total energy; the number of particles is fixed.
2.4. Degeneracy
2.5. Energy Density
- The vacuum density is numerically equal to the density of the modes—its factor from the zero-level is compensated by the degeneracy ;
- Modes and their zero-point energies appear for the electromagnetic field after Fourier transformation, so, strictly speaking, assuming a mode occupies some volume (even on average) is improper;
- Derivation of the statistical distribution for modes assumes they are independent and that the number of quanta in each mode is high: this may leave some speculation whether the vacuum density is described by Equation (20) in cases when there are few or no quanta (associated with real photons);
- The vacuum density is temperature- and energy-independent (non-thermal, linear); in current derivation, this appears as a consequence of several features: modes are independent and each mode’s microstate energy has a zero-level energy that is proportional to the mode quantum’s energy with the same factor for each mode;
- The vacuum density and its energy density are infinite if there is no cutoff at high energies/frequencies; the introduction of such an ultraviolet cutoff is a viable option, for example, in doubly special relativity [18].
3. The Vacuum Permeability and Permittivity
3.1. Calculation with ZPF Density Using Oscillator Model
- each virtual fermion–antifermion pair behaves as a harmonic oscillator with the levels separated by ; specifically, this is the energy gap between the ground state of a virtual pair and the excited state where both particles become real.
- a virtual fermion–antifermion pair becomes real if is added to the mode so the oscillator frequency is actually instead of ;
- we use the vacuum (mode) density for the estimation of instead of the average volume following the alternative proposed at the end of [12].
3.2. Relations between Magnetic and Electric Dipole Moments of Virtual Pairs
- the magnetic moment, , for fermions with charge has an additional factor Q;
- for electric dipole moment, , the “distance”, x, is defined as .
3.3. Other Considerations for the Virtual Pair Models
4. Photon Propagation and Propagation Time Dispersion
- ), where this time, in particular, serves to define the size/volume of the virtual pair [12];
- with the best fit for , where the lifetime modified in the presence of electromagnetic field serves to evaluate and [10];
- since, after interaction with the photon, the virtual pair forms a quasi-stationary state in Ref. [11].
5. Conclusions and Discussions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
GRB | Gamma-ray burst |
FWHM | Full-width half-maximum |
SED | Stochastic electrodynamics |
QED | Quantum electrodynamics |
QFT | Quantum field theory |
QM | Quantum mechanics |
ZPF | Zero-point fluctuations |
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Hugon, C.; Kulikovskiy, V. Zero-Point Energy Density at the Origin of the Vacuum Permittivity and Photon Propagation Time Fluctuation. Physics 2024, 6, 94-107. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics6010007
Hugon C, Kulikovskiy V. Zero-Point Energy Density at the Origin of the Vacuum Permittivity and Photon Propagation Time Fluctuation. Physics. 2024; 6(1):94-107. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics6010007
Chicago/Turabian StyleHugon, Christophe, and Vladimir Kulikovskiy. 2024. "Zero-Point Energy Density at the Origin of the Vacuum Permittivity and Photon Propagation Time Fluctuation" Physics 6, no. 1: 94-107. https://doi.org/10.3390/physics6010007