Quantum Radiation and Dissipation in Relation to Classical Radiation and Radiation Reaction
Jen-Tsung Hsiang, Bei-Lok Hu

TL;DR
This paper explores the connection between quantum and classical radiation phenomena from atom-field interactions, showing how vacuum fluctuations lead to quantum radiation and dissipation, while mean fields produce classical radiation with distinct dynamics.
Contribution
It extends previous work by analyzing how quantum vacuum fluctuations and classical mean fields separately contribute to radiation and dissipation in atom-field systems.
Findings
Quantum vacuum fluctuations match quantum radiation reaction effects.
Classical mean fields drive classical radiation emission.
Quantum and classical components are statistically decoupled and behave differently over time.
Abstract
This work continues the investigation of radiation phenomena from atom-field interactions, extending our earlier study of quantum radiation from a stationary atom's internal degree of freedom, modeled by a harmonic oscillator, to the emittance of classical radiation. By assuming that the atom interacts with a quantum scalar field initially in a coherent state, we show how a stochastic component of the internal dynamics of the atom arises from the vacuum fluctuations of the field, resulting in the emittance of quantum radiation, whose reaction induces quantum dissipation in the internal dynamics. We also show how the deterministic mean field drives the internal classical mean component to emit classical radiation and receive classical radiation reaction. Both components are statistically distinct and fully decoupled. It is clearly seen that the effects of the vacuum fluctuations of the…
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