The Casimir effect in the presence of infrared transparency
Max Warkentin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how infrared transparency affects the Casimir force between surfaces, using a DGP brane model, revealing that IR transparency modifies the force through competing effects on mode spectra.
Contribution
It introduces a model where IR transparency influences the Casimir effect, showing how boundary conditions and mode leakage alter the force compared to ideal cases.
Findings
IR transparency modifies the discrete mode spectrum
Casimir force is weakened due to mode leakage and exclusion
Results are applicable to various higher-dimensional setups
Abstract
We revisit the Casimir effect perceived by two surfaces in the presence of infrared (IR) transparency. To address this problem, we study a model, where such a phenomenon naturally arises: the DGP model with two parallel 3-branes, each endowed with a localized curvature term. In that model, the UV modes of the 5-dimensional graviton are suppressed on the branes, while the IR modes can penetrate them freely. First, we find that the DGP branes act as "effective" (momentum-dependent) boundary conditions for the gravitational field, so that the (gravitational) Casimir force between them emerges. Second, we discover that the presence of an IR transparency region for the discrete modes modifies the standard Casimir force -- as derived for ideal Dirichlet boundary conditions -- in two competing ways: i) The exclusion of soft modes from the discrete spectrum leads to an increase of the Casimir…
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