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The paradox of the Casimir force in inhomogeneous transformation media

Published 14 May 2013 in quant-ph | (1305.3166v1)

Abstract: It has recently been argued that Casimir-Lifshitz forces depend in detail on the microphysics of a system; calculations of the Casimir force in inhomogeneous media yield results that are cutoff-dependent. This result has been shown to hold generally. But suppose we introduce an inhomogeneous metamaterial into a cavity that effectively implements a simple distortion of the coordinate system. Considered in its 'virtual space', the optical properties of such a material are homogeneous and consequently free from the cutoff-dependency associated with inhomogeneous media. This conclusion should be reconciled with recent advances in our understanding of Casimir-Lifshitz forces. We consider an example of such a system here and demonstrate that, whilst the size of the Casimir force is modified by the inhomogeneous medium, the force is cutoff-independent and can be stated exactly. The apparent paradox dissolves when we recognise that an idealised metamaterial that could implement a virtual geometry for all frequencies would be devoid of internal scattering, and would not give rise to a cutoff-dependency in the Casimir force for that reason.

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