Casimir effect

Thursday 18 October 2007

In physics, the Casimir effect or Casimir-Polder force is a physical force exerted between separate objects due to resonance of all-pervasive energy fields in the intervening space between the objects. This is sometimes described in terms of virtual particles interacting with the objects, due to the mathematical form of one possible way of calculating the strength of the effect. Because the strength of the force falls off rapidly with distance, it is only measurable when the distance between the objects is extremely small. On a submicron scale, this force becomes so strong that it becomes the dominant force between uncharged conductors. Indeed at separations of 10 nm — about a hundred times the typical size of an atom — the Casimir effect produces the equivalent of 1 atmosphere of pressure (101.3 kPa).

4 comments:

bomMAI said...

And hence i understand the true meaning of the line "keep looking at this page for a plethora of posts on anything and everything.
" in ur previous post.

sridhar said...

exactly......... :)

Gayathri said...

another Einstein in the making??? :P

sridhar said...

nothing of that sort, casimir effect is pretty common and well known.