Stefan-Boltzmann law revisited
Lino Reggiani, Eleonora Alfinito

TL;DR
This paper revisits the Stefan-Boltzmann law by incorporating quantum effects like Planck energy quantization and Casimir size quantization, resolving classical and quantum paradoxes related to black-body radiation.
Contribution
It provides a quantum-mechanical reinterpretation of the SB law that addresses and resolves longstanding classical and quantum paradoxes.
Findings
Resolution of the first Boltzmann paradox through quantum effects
Resolution of the second Boltzmann paradox via Casimir size quantization
Enhanced understanding of black-body radiation at quantum scales
Abstract
The Stefan-Boltzmann (SB) law relates the emissivity , given in , of an ideal black-body cavity at thermal equilibrium to the fourth power of the absolute temperature as , with the SB constant, firstly estimated by Stefan to within per cent of the actual value. The law is a pillar of modern physics since its microscopic derivation implies the quantization of the energy related to the electromagnetic field. Somewhat astonishing, Boltzmann presented his derivation in 1878 making use only of electrodynamic and thermodynamic classical concepts, apparently without introducing any quantum hypothesis (here called first Boltzmann paradox). By using Planck (1901) quantization of the radiation field in terms of a gas of photons, the SB law received a microscopic interpretation providing also the value of the SB…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum Electrodynamics and Casimir Effect · Experimental and Theoretical Physics Studies · Advanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
