Control of the Casimir force by the modification of dielectric properties with light
F. Chen, G. L. Klimchitskaya, V. M. Mostepanenko, and U. Mohideen

TL;DR
This paper experimentally demonstrates that the Casimir force can be modulated by light-induced changes in the dielectric properties of a silicon membrane, with results aligning with Lifshitz theory when static permittivity is considered.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental evidence of Casimir force control via light-modified dielectric properties of silicon, validating theoretical models at finite temperature.
Findings
Casimir force decreases with increased charge-carrier density
Experimental data agrees with Lifshitz theory at laboratory temperature
Including dc conductivity in models leads to inconsistency with experiments
Abstract
The experimental demonstration of the modification of the Casimir force between a gold coated sphere and a single-crystal Si membrane by light pulses is performed. The specially designed and fabricated Si membrane was irradiated with 514 nm laser pulses of 5 ms width in high vacuum leading to a change of the charge-carrier density. The difference in the Casimir force in the presence and in the absence of laser radiation was measured by means of an atomic force microscope as a function of separation at different powers of the absorbed light. The total experimental error of the measured force differences at a separation of 100 nm varies from 10 to 20% in different measurements. The experimental results are compared with theoretical computations using the Lifshitz theory at both zero and laboratory temperatures. The total theoretical error determined mostly by the uncertainty in the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
