Electron response to radiation under linear acceleration: classical, QED and accelerated frame predictions
B. M. Hegelich, L. Labun, O. Z. Labun, G. Torrieri, and H. Truran

TL;DR
This paper investigates how an electron responds to radiation under constant acceleration, deriving classical fluctuation-dissipation relations and comparing them with quantum electrodynamics predictions, highlighting experimental challenges.
Contribution
It provides a classical derivation of fluctuation-dissipation relations for an accelerated electron and compares classical and quantum results for high acceleration regimes.
Findings
Classical fluctuation-dissipation relation derived from electrodynamics.
Classical and quantum results for relaxation times compared.
Experimental detection of effects requires more precise observables.
Abstract
A model detector undergoing constant, infinite-duration acceleration converges to an equilibrium state described by the Hawking-Unruh temperature . To relate this prediction to experimental observables, a point-like charged particle, such as an electron, is considered in place of the model detector. Instead of the detector's internal degree of freedom, the electron's low-momentum fluctuations in the plane transverse to the acceleration provide a degree of freedom and observables which are compatible with the symmetry and thermalize by interaction with the radiation field. General arguments in the accelerated frame suggest thermalization and a fluctuation-dissipation relation but leave underdetermined the magnitude of either the fluctuation or the dissipation. Lab frame analysis reproduces the radiation losses, described by the classical Lorentz-Abraham-Dirac…
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