Strong Noninertial Radiative Shifts in Atomic Spectra at Low Accelerations
Navdeep Arya, D. Jaffino Stargen, Kinjalk Lochan, Sandeep K. Goyal

TL;DR
This paper proposes a method to detect the Unruh effect by enhancing and measuring noninertial radiative energy shifts in atoms within a cylindrical cavity, achieving significant signals at feasible accelerations.
Contribution
It introduces a cavity-based approach to amplify noninertial radiative shifts, making the Unruh effect more detectable with current experimental capabilities.
Findings
Noninertial radiative shifts can be enhanced by cavity mode modification.
Monitoring energy shifts yields stronger signals than transition rates.
A 50-fold energy shift difference is achievable at small accelerations.
Abstract
Despite numerous proposals investigating various properties of accelerated detectors in different settings, detecting the Unruh effect remains challenging due to the typically weak signal at achievable accelerations. For an atom with frequency gap , accelerated in free space, significant acceleration-induced modification of properties like transition rates and radiative energy shifts requires accelerations of the order of . In this paper, we make the case for a suitably modified density of field states to be complemented by a judicious selection of the system property to be monitored. We study the radiative energy-level shift in inertial and uniformly accelerated atoms coupled to a massless quantum scalar field inside a cylindrical cavity. Uniformly accelerated atoms experience thermal correlations in the inertial vacuum, and the radiative shifts are expected to…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum optics and atomic interactions · Atomic and Subatomic Physics Research · Crystallography and Radiation Phenomena
