Lezing | Tuesday Talks: Science Insights
Surprising vacuum forces in a superconductor
- Datum
- dinsdag 13 februari 2024
- Tijd
- Bezoekadres
-
Gorlaeus Building
Einsteinweg 55
2333 CC Leiden - Zaal
- Atrium, 1st floor
Tuesday Talks: Science Insights is de maandelijkse dosis onderzoeksinspiratie van Leiden Science, van onze medewerkers, voor onze medewerkers en alle andere nieuwsgierigen.
De voertaal voor deze lezingenserie is Engels.
Surprising vacuum forces in a superconductor
In this upcoming ‘Tuesday Talks: Science Insights’, we will dive into the realms of quantum mechanics and nanotechnology. A few months ago, Carlo Beenakker's interest was piqued by signs that Casimir's universal attractive force also manifests itself in superconductors. In his talk he will take you on the journey of his findings and how he conducted his research to get to the bottom of this.
The force from nothing
In 1948, Hendrik Casimir predicted a universal attractive force between two neutral metal plates at small distances. Universal, because the force is independent of the properties of the metals as long as they are good conductors. The attraction arises because the 19th-century concept of vacuum as empty space is wrong. Quantum mechanics tells us that vacuum is not empty at all but filled with particle-antiparticle pairs that emerge out of nothing and vanish back into nothing an instant later. In between the two plates these virtual particles have a lower density than outside. The resulting negative pressure pulls the plates together.
Casimir meets Josephson
For many decades Casimir's ‘force from nothing’ was mainly of interest for fundamental physics. Recently it has become relevant for nanotechnology as well. Micro-electromechanical devices are small enough that their operation is influenced by the Casimir force. Superconducting nanostructures provide a way to control the force via the Josephson effect, which is the flow of current between two superconductors as a function of their phase difference. In this way the attractive force can be transformed into a repulsive force.
Join this edition of Tuesday Talks: Science Insights!
Everyone who is interested in this edition's topic is welcome. Please let us know if you are attending.
I will join!About the speaker
Carlo Beenakker is a theoretical physicist at the Instituut-Lorentz of LION. He moved to Leiden University from the Philips Research Laboratories, where he learned about the vacuum force from Casimir himself. His current research, supported by an ERC Advanced grant, centres on topological quantum matter, as a platform for quantum computation.
Programme
The programme of the Tuesday Talks: Science Insights is:
15.45 hrs | Take a seat |
16.00 hrs | Introduction by dean Jasper Knoester |
16.10 hrs | Lecture by speaker, followed by Q&A |
17.00 hrs | Drinks |
About Tuesday Talks: Science Insights
Tuesday Talks: Science Insights is Leiden Science’s monthly dose of research inspiration from our staff, for our staff and all other curious minds. Every second Tuesday of the month from 16:00 hrs till 17:00 hrs, drinks and meet up afterwards till 18.00 hrs.