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- Mesquite, TX 75150
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- April 10, 1990
-
- This paper was written and courteously shared by
- Dr. H. E. Puthoff of the
- Institute for Advanced Studies,
- 1301 Capital Of Texas Highway S., Suite B 121
- Austin, Texas 78746
- (512) 328-5751
-
- Quantum Fluctuations of Empty Space :
- A New Rosetta Stone of Physics?
-
- In a recent article in the popular press (The Economist, January
- 7, 1989, pp. 71-74) it was noted how many of this century's new
- technologies depend on the Alice-in-Wonderland physics of quantum
- mechanics, with all of its seeming absurdities.
-
- For starters, one begins with the observation that classical
- physics tells us that atoms, which can be likened to a miniature
- solar system with electron planets orbiting a nuclear sun, should
- not exist.
-
- The circling electrons should radiate away their energy like
- microscopic radio antennas and spiral into the nucleus. But atoms
- do exist, and multitudinous other phenomena which don't obey the
- rules do occur.
-
- To resolve this cognitive dissonance physicists introduced quantum
- mechanics, which is essentially a set of mathematical rules to
- describe what in fact does happen. But when we re-ask the
- question, "why didn't the electron radiate away its energy?" the
- answer is, basically, "well, in quantum theory it doesn't."
-
- It's at this point that not only the layman but some physicists
- can begin to feel that someone's not playing fair. I say only
- some physicists because the majority of working physicists are
- content simply to use quantum rules that work, that describe (if
- only statistically) what will happen in a given experiment under
- certain conditions.
-
- These are the so-called "logical positivists" who, in a
- philosophical sense, are like the news reporter whose only
- interest is the bottom line.
-
- There are nevertheless individuals here and there who still want
- to know why the electron didn't radiate, why Einstein's equations
- are in this form and not another, where does the ubiquitous zero-
- point energy that fills even empty space come from, why quantum
- theory, and perhaps the biggest question of all, how did the
- universe get started anyway?
-
-
- Page 1
- Surprisingly enough, there may be answers to these seemingly
- unanswerable meta-level questions. Perhaps even more surprising,
- they seem to be emerging, as a recent book title put it, from
- "Something called Nothing" (1), or to put it more correctly, from
- empty space, the vacuum, the void.
-
- To comprehend the significance of this statement, we will have to
- take a detour into the phenomenon of fluctuations with which
- quantum theory abounds, including the fluctuations of empy space
- itself.
-
- Before the advent of quantum theory, physics taught that any
- simple oscillator such as a pendulum, when excited, would
- eventually come to rest if not continuously energized by some
- outside force such as a spring. This is because of friction
- losses in the system.
-
- After it was recognized that quantum theory was a more accurate
- representation of nature, one of the findings of quantum theory
- was that such an oscillator would in fact not come to total rest
- but rather would continue to "jiggle" randomly about its resting
- point with a small amount of energy always present, the so-called
- "zero-point energy."
-
- Although it may not be observable to the eye on your grandfather
- clock because it is so minute, it is nonetheless very real, and in
- many physical systems has important consequences.
-
- One example is the presence of a certain amount of "noise" in a
- microwave receiver that can never be gotten rid of, no matter how
- perfect the technology. This is an example which shows that not
- only physical devices such as pendulums have this property of
- incessant fluctuation, but also fields, such as electromagnetic
- fields (radio waves, microwaves, light, X-rays, etc.).
-
- As it turns out, even though the zero-point energy in any
- particular mode of an electromagnetic field is minute, there are
- so many possible modes of propagation (frequencies, directions) in
- open space, the zero-point energy summed up over all possible
- modes is quite enormous; in fact, greater than, for example,
- nuclear energy densities. And this in all of so-called "empty"
- space around us. Let us concentrate on the effects of such
- electromagnetic zero-point fluctuations.
-
- With such large values, it might seem that the effects of
- electromagnetic zero-point energy should be quite obvious, but
- this is not the case because of its extremely uniform density.
-
- Just as a vase standing in a room is not likely to fall over
- spontaneously, so a vase bombarded uniformly on all sides by
- millions of ping pong balls would not do likewise because of the
- balanced conditions of the uniform bombardment.
-
- The only evidence of such a barrage might be minute jiggling of
- the vase, and similar mechanisms are thought to be involved in the
- quantum jiggle of zero-point motion.
-
- However, there are certain conditions in which the uniformity of
- the background electromagnetic zero-point energy is slightly
- disturbed and leads to physical effects.
-
- Page 2
- One is the slight perturbation of the lines seen from transitions
- between atomic states known as the Lamb Shift (2), named after its
- discoverer, Willis Lamb.
-
- Another, also named for its discoverer, is the Casimir Effect, a
- unique attractive quantum force between closely-spaced metal
- plates.
-
- An elegant analysis by Milonni et. al. at Los Angeles National
- Laboratory (3) shows the Casimir force to be due to radiation
- pressure from the background electromagnetic zero-point energy
- which has become unbalanced due to the presence of the plates, and
- which results in the plates being pushed together.
-
- From this it would seem that it might be possible to extract
- electrical energy from the vacuum, and indeed the possibility of
- doing so (at least in principle) has been shown in a paper of that
- same name by Robert Forward (4) at Hughes Research Laboratories in
- Malibu, California.
-
- What does this have to do with our basic questions? Let's start
- with the question as top why the electron in a simple hydrogen
- atom doesn't radiate as it circles the proton in its stable ground
- state atomic orbit.
-
- This issue has been re-addressed in a recent paper by the author,
- this time taking into account what has been learned over the years
- about the effects of zero-point energy. (5) There it is shown
- that the electron can be seen as continually radiating away its
- energy as predicted by classical theory, but simultaneously
- absorbing a compensating amount of energy from the ever-present
- sea of zero-point energy in which the atomm is immersed, and an
- assumed equilibrium between these two processes leads to the
- correct values for the parameters known to define the ground-state
- orbit.
-
- Thus the ground-state orbit is set by a dynamic equilibrium in
- which collapse of the state is prevented by the presence of the
- zero-point energy. The significance of this observation is that
- the very stability of matter itself appears to depend on the
- presence of the underlying sea of electromagnetic zero-point
- energy.
-
- With regard to the gravitational attraction that is described so
- well by Einstein's theory, its fundamental nature is still not
- well understood. Whether addressed simply in terms of Newton's
- Law, or with the full rigor of general relativity, gravitational
- theory is basically descriptive in nature, without revealing the
- underlying dynamics for that description.
-
- As a result, attempts to unify gravity with the other forces
- (electromagnetic, strong and weak nuclear forces) or to develop a
- quantum theory of gravity have foundered again and again on
- difficulties that can be traced back to a lack of understanding at
- a fundamental level.
-
- To rectify these difficulties, theorists by and large have
- resorted to ever-increasing levels of mathematical sophistication
- and abstraction, as in the recent development of supergravity and
- superstring theories.
-
- Page 3
- Taking a completely different tack when addressing these
- difficulties in the sixties, the well-known Russian physicist
- Andrei Sakharov put forward the somewhat radical hypothesis that
- gravitation might not be a fundamental interaction at all, but
- rather a secondary or residual effect associated with other (non-
- gravitational) fields. (6)
-
- Specifically, Sakharov suggested that gravity might be an induced
- effect brought about by changes in the zero-point energy of the
- vacuum, due to the presence of matter.
-
- If correct, gravity would then be understood as a variation on the
- Casimir theme, in which background zero-point-energy pressures
- were again responsible.
-
- Although Sakharov did not develop the concept much further, he did
- outline certain criteria such a theory would have to meet such as
- predicting the value of the gravitational constant G in terms of
- zero-point-energy parameters.
-
- The approach to gravity outlined by Sakharov has recently been
- addressed in detail, and with positive reults, again by the
- author. (7)
-
- The gravitational interaction is shown to begin with the fact that
- a particle situated in the sea of electromagnetic zero-point
- fluctuations develops a "jitter" motion, or ZITTERBEWEGUNG as it
- is called.
-
- When there are two or more particles they are each influenced not
- only by the fluctuating background field, but also by the fields
- generated by the other particles, all similarly undergoing
- ZITTERBEWEGUNG motion, and the inter-particle coupling due to
- these fields results in the attractive gravitational force.
-
- Gravity can thus be understood as a kind of long-range Casimir
- force. Because of its electromagnetic unerpinning, gravitational
- theory in this form constitutes what is known in the literature as
- an "already-unified" theory.
-
- The major benefit of the new approach is that it provides a basis
- for understanding various characteristics of the gravitational
- interaction hitherto unexplained.
-
- These include the relative weakness of the gravitational force
- under ordinary circumstances (shown to be due to the fact that the
- coupling constant G depends inversely on the large value of the
- high-frequency cutoff of the zero-point-fluctuation spectrum); the
- existence of positive but not negative mass (traceable to a
- positive-only kinetic-energy basis for the mass parameter); and
- the fact that gravity cannot be shielded (a consequence of the
- fact that quantum zero-point-fluctuation "noise" in general cannot
- be shielded, a factor which in other contexts sets a lower limit
- on the detectability of electromagnetic signals).
-
- As to where the ubiquitous electromagnetic zero-point energy comes
- from, historically there have been two schools of thought:
- existence by fiat as part of the boundary conditions of the
- universe, or generation by the (quantum-fluctuation) motion of
- charged particles that constitute matter.
-
- Page 4
- A straightforward calculation of the latter possibility has
- recently been carried out by the author. (8)
-
- It was assumed that zero-point fields drive particle motion, and
- that the sum of particle motions throughout the universe in turn
- generate the zero-point fields, in the form of a self-regenerating
- cosmological feedback cycle not unlike a cat chasing its own tail.
-
- This self-constistent approach yielded the known zero-point field
- distribution, thus indicating a dynamic-generation process for the
- zero-point fields.
-
- Now as to the question of why quantum theory. Although knowledge
- of zero-point fields emerged from quantum physics as that subject
- matured, Professor Timothy Boyer at City College in New York took
- a contrary view.
-
- He bagan asking in the late sixties what would happen if we took
- classical physics as it was and introduced a background of random,
- classical fluctuating fields of the zero-point spectral
- distribution type. Could such an all-classical model reproduce
- quantum theory in its entirety, and might this possibility have
- been overlooked by the founders of quantum theory who were not
- aware of the existence of such a fluctuating background field?
-
- (First, it is clear from the previously-mentioned cosmological
- calculation that such a field distribution would reproduce itself
- on a continuing dynamic basis.)
-
- Boyer began by tackling the problems that led to the introduction
- of quantum theory in the first place, such as the blackbody
- radiation curve and the photoelectric effect. One by one the
- known quantum results were reproduced by this upstart neoclassical
- approach, now generally referred to as Stochastic Electrodynamics
- (SED) (9), as contrasted to quantum electrodynamics (QED).
-
- Indeed, Milonni at Los Alamos noted in a review of the Boyer work
- that had physicists in 1900 thought of taking this route, they
- would probably have been more comfortable with this classical
- approach than with Planck's hypothesis of the quantum, and one can
- only speculate as to the direction that physics would have taken
- then.
-
- The list of topics successfully analyzed within the SED
- formulation (i.e., yielding precise quantitative agreement with
- QED treatments) has now been extended to include the harmonic
- oscillator, Casimir and Van der Waals forces and the thermal
- effects of acceleration through the vacuum, to name a few.
-
- Out of this work emerged the reasons for such phenomena as the
- uncertainty principle, the incessant fluctuation of particle
- motion, the existence of Van der Waals forces even at zero
- temperature, and so forth, all shown to be due to the influence of
- the unceasing activity of the random background fields.
-
- There are also some notable failures in SED, such as transparent
- derivation of something as simple as Schrodinger's equation, which
- turns out as yet to be an intractable problem.
-
- Therefore, it is unlikely that quantum theory as we have come to
-
- Page 5
- know it and love it will be entirely replaced by a refurbished
- classical theory in the near future.
-
- Nonetheless, the successes to date of the SED approach, by its
- highlighting of the role of background zero-point-fluctuations,
- means that when the final chapter is written on quantum theory,
- field fluctuations in empty space will be accorded an honored
- position.
-
- And now to the preeminent question of all, where did the Universe
- come from? Or, in modern terminology, what started the Big Bang?
- Could quantum fluctuations of empty space have something to do
- with this also?
-
- Well, Prof. Edward Tryon of Hunter College of the City University
- of New York thought so when he proposed in 1973 that our Universe
- may have originated as a fluctuation of the vacuum on a large
- scale, as "simply one of those things which happen from time to
- time." (10)
-
- This idea was later refined and updated within the context of
- inflationary cosmology by Alexander Vilenkin of Tufts University,
- who proposed that the universe is created by quantum tunneling
- from literally nothing into the something we call our universe.
- (11)
-
- Although highly speculative, these types of models indicate once
- again that physicists find themselves turning again and again to
- the Void (and the fluctuations thereof) for their answers.
-
- Those with a practical bent of mind may be left with yet one more
- unanswered question. Can this emerging Rosetta Stone of physics
- be used to translate such lofty insights into mundane application?
-
- Could the engineer of the future specialize in "vacuum
- engineering?" Could the energy crisis be solved by harnessing the
- energies of the zero-point sea?
-
- After all, since the basic zero-point energy form is highly random
- in nature, and tending towards self-cancellation, if a way could
- be found to bring order out of chaos, the, because of the highly
- energetic nature of the vacuum fluctuations, relatively large
- effects could in principle be produced.
-
- Given our relative ignorance at this point, we must fall back on a
- quote given by Podolny (12) when contemplating this same issue.
-
- "It would be just as presumptuous to deny the feasibility of
- useful application as it would be irresponsible to guarantee such
- application."
-
- Only the future can reveal the ultimate use to which Mankind will
- put this remaining Fire of the Gods, the quantum fluctuations of
- empty space.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Page 6
-
-
- REFERENCES
-
- 1. R. Podolny, "Something Called Nothing" (Mir Publ., Moscow,
- 1986)
-
- 2. W. E. Lamb, Jr., and R. C. Retherford, "Fine Structure of the
- Hydrogen Atom by a Microwave Method," Phys. Rev.
- 72, 241 (1947)
-
- 3. P. W. Milonni, R. J. Cook and M. E. Goggin, "Radiation
- Pressure from the Vacuum : Physical
- Interpretation of the Casimir Force," Phys. Rev.
- A 38, 1621 (1988)
-
- 4. R. L. Forward, "Extracting Electrical Energy from the Vacuum
- by Cohesion of Charged Foliated Conductors,"
- Phys. Rev. B 30, 1700 (1984)
-
- 5. H. E. Puthoff, "Ground State of Hydrogen as a Zero-Point
- Fluctuation-Determined State," Phys. Rev. D 35,
- 3266 (1987)
- See also science news article, "Why Atoms Don't Collapse," in
- New Scientist, p. 26 (9 July 1987)
-
- 6. A. D. Sakharov, "Vacuum Quantum Fluctuations in Curved Space
- and the Theory of Gravitation, Dokl. Akad. Nauk.
- SSSR (Sov. Phys. - Dokl. 12, 1040 (1968).
- See also discussion in C. W. Misner, K. S. Thorne and J. A.
- Wheeler, Gravitation (Freeman, San Francisco,
- 1973), p. 426
-
- 7. H. E. Puthoff, "Gravity as a Zero-Point Fluctuation Force,"
- Phys. Rev. A 39, 2333 (1989)
-
- 8. H. E. Puthoff, "Source of Vacuum Electromagnetic Zero-Point
- Energy," subm. to Phys. Rev. A, (March 1989)
-
- 9. See review of SED by T. H. Boyer, "A Brief Survey of
- Stochastic Electrodynamics," in Foundations of
- Radiation Theory and Quantum Electrodynamics,
- edited by A. O. Barut (Plenum, New York, 1980)
- See also the very readable account "The Classical Vacuum," in
- Scientific American, p. 70 (August 1985)
-
- 10. E. P. Tryon, "Is the Universe a Vacuum Fluctuation?" Nature
- 246, 396 (1973)
-
- 11. A. Vilenkin, "Creation of Universes from Nothing," Phys.
- Lett. 117B, 25 (1982)
-
- 12. R. Podolny, Ref. 1, p. 211
-
- We of Vangard Sciences wish to express our thanks to Dr. Puthoff
- for allowing us to list his excellent paper on Zero Point Energy
- on the KeelyNet. If you have questions or comments, you may
- address them to KeelyNet or
- directly to Dr. Puthoff at the address on the title page.
- Thank you for using KeelyNet!
-
- Page 7