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The Born Versus Heisenberg Quantum-Vacuum Controversy and Beyond.

Authors :
Roso, Luis
Lera, Roberto
Ravichandran, Smrithan
Longman, Andrew
He, Calvin Z.
Antonio Pérez-Hernández, José
Apiñaniz, Jon I.
Mahnot, Rohan
Mateu, Vicent
Fedosejevs, Robert
Hill III, Wendell T.
Source :
Topics in Applied Physics; 2024, Vol. 151, p161-195, 35p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Photon-photon collisions, as one of the fundamental processes in quantum physics, have attracted a lot of attention. However, most effort has been focused on photons energetic enough to create particle-antiparticle pairs. The low energy limit-e.g., optical photons-has attracted less attention because of their extremely low collision cross section. By optical photons we mean UV, visible and infrared, although the cutting edge of extreme lasers is in the near infrared. The Schwinger critical field for pair generation seems not possible, at least directly, with the current laser technology. This often is considered as a problem, but we view this as an asset; the near impossibility of pair production via photon-photon scattering in the infrared is a perfect scenario to study virtual pairs that characterize Dirac’s quantum vacuum. Moreover, it is remarkable that this scenario of photon-photon collisions was already studied in the 1930s by two of the fathers of Quantum Mechanics, among others, at the dawn of this theory. In their respective papers, however, Born and Heisenberg arrived to different conclusions regarding the birefringence of vacuum. This controversy is still an open question that will be solved soon, we hope, with upcoming experiments. Here, we discuss a possible photon-photon collision experiment with extreme lasers, and will show that it can provide measurable effects, allowing fundamental information about the essence of Quantum Electrodynamics and its Lagrangian to be extracted. A possible experimental scenario with two ultraintense pulses for detecting photon-photon scattering is analyzed. This would need a high-precision measurement, with control of temporal and spatial jitter, and noise. We conclude that such an experiment is barely feasible at 10<superscript>23</superscript> W/cm² (today’s intensity record) and very promising at 10<superscript>24</superscript> W/cm<subscript>2</subscript>. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03034216
Volume :
151
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Topics in Applied Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177890511
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-55463-6_8