Lateral Casimir force between sinusoidally corrugated surfaces: Asymmetric profiles, deviations from the proximity force approximation and comparison with exact theory
H.-C. Chiu, G. L. Klimchitskaya, V. N. Marachevsky, V. M., Mostepanenko, U. Mohideen

TL;DR
This study measures the lateral Casimir force between sinusoidally corrugated surfaces, revealing deviations from the proximity force approximation and confirming the importance of diffraction effects, with implications for nanotechnology applications.
Contribution
It provides the first experimental verification of deviations from PFA in lateral Casimir forces and compares measurements with exact theory including material and temperature effects.
Findings
Observed asymmetry in the lateral Casimir force profile.
Quantitative agreement with exact Rayleigh expansion theory.
Significant deviations from proximity force approximation predictions.
Abstract
The lateral Casimir force, which arises between aligned sinusoidally corrugated surfaces of a sphere and a plate, was measured for the case of a small corrugation period beyond the applicability region of the proximity force approximation. The increased amplitudes of the corrugations on both the sphere and the plate allowed observation of an asymmetry of the lateral Casimir force, i.e., deviation of its profile from a perfect sine function. The dependences of the lateral force on the phase shift between the corrugations on both test bodies were measured at different separations in two sets of measurements with different amplitudes of corrugations on the sphere. The maximum magnitude of the lateral force as a function of separation was also measured in two successive experiments. All measurement data were compared with the theoretical approach using the proximity force approximation and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Carbon Nanotubes in Composites
