Optical chopper driven by the Casimir force
G. L. Klimchitskaya, V. M. Mostepanenko, V. M. Petrov, and T. Tschudi

TL;DR
This paper introduces an optical chopper based on the balance of Casimir and light pressures, utilizing atomically thin metallic mirrors in a Fabry-Pérot microfilter to generate periodic light pulses.
Contribution
It presents a detailed theoretical scheme for a quantum fluctuation-based optical chopper using atomically thin metallic mirrors and analyzes its feasibility with specific parameters.
Findings
The device can produce periodic light pulses due to resonance breakdown.
Casimir pressure effects are accurately modeled considering dielectric anisotropy.
The proposed design is feasible with silver mirrors on quartz glass.
Abstract
We propose the experimental scheme and present detailed theory of the optical chopper which functionality is based on the balance between the Casimir and light pressures. The proposed device consists of two atomically thin metallic mirrors forming the Fabry-P\'{e}rot microfilter. One of the mirrors is deposited on a solid cube and another one on a thinner wall subjected to bending under the influence of the attractive Casimir force and repulsive force due to the pressure of light from a continuous laser amplified in the resonator of a microfilter. The separation distance between the mirrors should only slightly exceed the half wavelength of the laser light. It is shown that in this case the resonance condition in the microfilter alternatively obeys and breaks down resulting in the periodic pulses of the transmitted light. The Casimir pressure is calculated taking into account an…
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