Understanding Zero-Point Energy in the Context of Classical Electromagnetism
Timothy H. Boyer

TL;DR
This paper explores how boundary conditions in classical electromagnetism influence the understanding of zero-point energy, emphasizing recent experimental evidence like Casimir force measurements that reveal the full electromagnetic spectrum including zero-point radiation.
Contribution
It highlights the importance of boundary conditions in classical electromagnetism for understanding zero-point energy and connects historical and modern experimental observations.
Findings
Casimir force measurements reveal the full radiation spectrum including zero-point radiation.
Boundary conditions determine the presence of zero-point energy in classical electromagnetic systems.
Classical physics must incorporate zero-point radiation to align with modern experimental results.
Abstract
Today's textbooks of electromagnetism give the particular solution to Maxwell's equations involving the integral over the charge and current sources at retarded times. However, the texts fail to emphasize the role played by the choice of the boundary conditions corresponding to solutions of the homogeneous Maxwell equations. Here we discuss the role of these boundary conditions for an experimenter with a hypothetical charged harmonic oscillator as his equipment. We describe the observations of the experimenter when located near a radio station or immersed in thermal radiation at temperature T. The classical physicists at the end of the 19th century chose the homogeneous boundary conditions for Maxwell's equation based upon the experimental observations of Lummer and Pringsheim which measured only the thermal radiation which exceeded the random radiation surrounding their measuring…
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