About: Stochastic electrodynamics is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1495 publications have been published within this topic receiving 26892 citations. The topic is also known as: SED.
TL;DR: In this paper, a re-analysis of the field concept by returning to classical electromagnetism is presented, which is at the same time (1) well defined in postulates and (2) in agreement with experience.
Abstract: Many of our present hopes to understand the
behavior of matter and energy rely upon the
notion of field. Consequently it may be appropriate to
re-examine critically the origin and use of this century old
concept. This idea developed in the study of classical
electromagnetism at a time when it was considered
appropriate to treat electric charge as a continuous
substance. It is not obvious that general acceptance in
the early 1800's of the principle of the atomicity of
electric charge would have led to the field concept in
its present form. Is it after all essential in classical field
theory to require that a particle act upon itself? Of
quantum theories of fields and their possibilities we
hardly know enough to demand on quantum grounds
that such a direct self-interaction should exist. Quantum
theory defines those possibilities of measurement which
are consistent with the principle of complementarity,
but the measuring devices themselves after all necessarily
make use of classical concepts to specify the quantity
measured. For this reason it is appropriate to begin
a re-analysis of the field concept by returning to classical
electrodynamics. We therefore propose here to go back
to the great basic problem of classical physics-the
motion of a system of charged particles under the
influence of electromagnetic forces-and to inquire
what description of the interactions and motions is
possible which is at the same time (1) well defined
(2) economical in postulates and (3) in agreement with
experience.
TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that spontaneous emission is not a property of an isolated atom but of an atom-vacuum system and that if these states are modified, such as placing the excited atom between mirrors or in a cavity, spontaneous emission can be greatly inhibited or enhanced.
Abstract: Ever since Einstein demonstrated that spontaneous emission must occur if matter and radiation are to achieve thermal equilibrium, physicists have generally believed that excited atoms inevitably radiate.1 Spontaneous emission is so fundamental that it is usually regarded as an inherent property of matter. This view, however, overlooks the fact that spontaneous emission is not a property of an isolated atom but of an atom-vacuum system. The most distinctive feature of such emission, irreversibility, comes about because an infinity of vacuum states is available to the radiated photon. If these states are modified—for instance, by placing the excited atom between mirrors or in a cavity—spontaneous emission can be greatly inhibited or enhanced.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed an investigation of the Lorentz-violating electrodynamics extracted from the renormalizable sector of the general CPT-and CPT violating standard model extension.
Abstract: An investigation is performed of the Lorentz-violating electrodynamics extracted from the renormalizable sector of the general Lorentz- and CPT-violating standard-model extension. Among the unconventional properties of radiation arising from Lorentz violation is birefringence of the vacuum. Limits on the dispersion of light produced by galactic and extragalactic objects provide bounds of $3\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}16}$ on certain coefficients for Lorentz violation in the photon sector. The comparative spectral polarimetry of light from cosmologically distant sources yields stringent constraints of $2\ifmmode\times\else\texttimes\fi{}{10}^{\ensuremath{-}32}.$ All remaining coefficients in the photon sector are measurable in high-sensitivity tests involving cavity-stabilized oscillators. Experimental configurations in Earth- and space-based laboratories are considered that involve optical or microwave cavities and that could be implemented using existing technology.
TL;DR: In this article, it is shown that the collision operator is related to the Hermitian reaction operator, for which a variational principle is constructed, which is not suitable as a practical means of treating electrodynamic questions, since commutators of field quantities at points separated by a timelike interval can be constructed only by solving the equations of motion.
Abstract: Attempts to avoid the divergence difficulties of quantum electrodynamics by multilation of the theory have been uniformly unsuccessful. The lack of convergence does indicate that a revision of electrodynamic concepts at ultrarelativistic energies is indeed necessary, but no appreciable alteration of the theory for moderate relativistic energies can be tolerated. The elementary phenomena in which divergences occur, in consequence of virtual transitions involving particles with unlimited energy, are the polarization of the vacuum and the self-energy of the electron, effects which essentially express the interaction of the electromagnetic and matter fields with their own vacuum fluctuations. The basic result of these fluctuation interactions is to alter the constants characterizing the properties of the individual fields, and their mutual coupling, albeit by infinite factors. The question is naturally posed whether all divergences can be isolated in such unobservable renormalization factors; more specifically, we inquire whether quantum electrodynamics can account unambiguously for the recently observed deviations from the Dirac electron theory, without the introduction of fundamentally new concepts. This paper, the first in a series devoted to the above question, is occupied with the formulation of a completely covariant electrodynamics. Manifest covariance with respect to Lorentz and gauge transformations is essential in a divergent theory since the use of a particular reference system or gauge in the course of calculation can result in a loss of covariance in view of the ambiguities that may be the concomitant of infinities. It is remarked, in the first section, that the customary canonical commutation relations, which fail to exhibit the desired covariance since they refer to field variables at equal times and different points of space, can be put in covariant form by replacing the four-dimensional surface $t=\mathrm{const}$. by a space-like surface. The latter is such that light signals cannot be propagated between any two points on the surface. In this manner, a formulation of quantum electrodynamics is constructed in the Heisenberg representation, which is obviously covariant in all its aspects. It is not entirely suitable, however, as a practical means of treating electrodynamic questions, since commutators of field quantities at points separated by a time-like interval can be constructed only by solving the equations of motion. This situation is to be contrasted with that of the Schr\"odinger representation, in which all operators refer to the same time, thus providing a distinct separation between kinematical and dynamical aspects. A formulation that retains the evident covariance of the Heisenberg representation, and yet offers something akin to the advantage of the Schr\"odinger representation can be based on the distinction between the properties of non-interacting fields, and the effects of coupling between fields. In the second section, we construct a canonical transformation that changes the field equations in the Heisenberg representation into those of non-interacting fields, and therefore describes the coupling between fields in terms of a varying state vector. It is then a simple matter to evaluate commutators of field quantities at arbitrary space-time points. One thus obtains an obviously convariant and practical form of quantum electrodynamics, expressed in a mixed Heisenberg-Schr\"odinger representation, which is called the interaction representation. The third section is devoted to a discussion of the covariant elimination of the longitudinal field, in which the customary distinction between longitudinal and transverse fields is replaced by a suitable covariant definition. The fourth section is concerned with the description of collision processes in terms of an invariant collision operator, which is the unitary operator that determines the over-all change in state of a system as the result of interaction. It is shown that the collision operator is simply related to the Hermitian reaction operator, for which a variational principle is constructed.
TL;DR: In this article, a new theory of quantum electrodynamics is presented, which is relativistically invariant, gauge invariant and unitary, and free of divergences.
Abstract: A new theory of quantum electrodynamics is presented, which is relativistically invariant, gauge invariant, unitary, and free of divergences. In this theory, mass renormalization, charge renormalization, and wavefunction renormalization are all finite. Experimental consequences are discussed, and theoretical implications, especially those related to causality, are analyzed.