Quantum theory of statistical radiation pressure in free space
Navdeep Arya, Navketan Batra, Kinjalk Lochan, Sandeep K. Goyal

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive quantum analysis of radiation pressure, revealing that atomic forces can be attractive or repulsive depending on the atomic state, with implications for understanding light-matter interactions.
Contribution
It introduces a complete quantum treatment of radiation pressure, showing how atomic state populations influence the direction of the force and analyzing the emission profile in quantum fields.
Findings
Excited atoms experience a pulling force with light.
Ground state atoms experience a repulsive force.
Quantum emission profiles lead to symmetric forces despite different probabilities.
Abstract
Light is known to exert radiation pressure on any surface it is incident upon, via the transfer of momentum from the light to the surface. In general, this force is assumed to be pushing or repulsive in nature. In this paper, we present a complete quantum treatment of radiation pressure. We show that the interaction of an atom with light can lead to both repulsive and attractive forces due to the absorption and emission of photons, respectively. An atom prepared in the excited state initially will experience a pulling force when interacting with light. On the other hand, if the atom is prepared in the ground state then the force will be repulsive while having the same magnitude as in the earlier case. Therefore, for an ensemble of atoms, the direction of the net force will be decided by the excited and ground state populations. In the semi-classical treatment of light-matter…
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.
