Giant Unruh effect in hyperbolic metamaterial waveguides
Abstract
The Unruh effect is the prediction that an accelerating object perceives its surroundings as a bath of thermal radiation even if it accelerates in vacuum. The Unruh effect is believed to be very difficult to observe in the experiment, since an observer accelerating at g=9.8 m/s2 should see vacuum temperature of only 4x10^-20 K. Here we demonstrate that photons in metamaterial waveguides may behave as massive quasi-particles accelerating at up to 10^24 g, which is about twelve orders of magnitude larger than the surface acceleration near a stellar black hole. These record high accelerations may enable experimental studies of the Unruh effect and the loss of quantum entanglement in strongly accelerated reference frames.
- Publication:
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Optics Letters
- Pub Date:
- May 2019
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1811.08555
- Bibcode:
- 2019OptL...44.2224S
- Keywords:
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- Physics - Optics;
- General Relativity and Quantum Cosmology
- E-Print:
- 4 pages, 3 figures, this version is accepted for publication in Optics Letters