Jul 15 2008
Cymbals don't clash of their own accord - in our world, anyway.
A scanning electron micrograph, taken with an electron microscope, shows the comb-like structure of a metal plate at the center of newly published University of Florida research on quantum physics. UF physicists found that corrugating the plate reduced the Casimir force, a quantum force that draws together very close objects. The discovery could prove useful as tiny “microelectromechanical” systems -- so-called MEMS devices that are already used in a wide array of consumer products -- become so small they are affected by quantum forces.
But the quantum world is bizarrely different. Two metal plates, placed almost 
  infinitesimally close together, spontaneously attract each other.
What seems like magic is known as the Casimir force, and it has been well-documented 
  in experiments. The cause goes to the heart of quantum physics: Seemingly empty 
  space is not actually empty but contains virtual particles associated with fluctuating 
  electromagnetic fields. These particles push the plates from both the inside 
  and the outside. However, only virtual particles of shorter wavelengths — 
  in the quantum world, particles exist simultaneously as waves — can fit 
  into the space between the plates, so that the outward pressure is slightly 
  smaller than the inward pressure. The result is the plates are forced together.
Now, University of Florida 
  physicists have found they can reduce the Casimir force by altering the surface 
  of the plates. The discovery could prove useful as tiny “microelectromechanical” 
  systems — so-called MEMS devices that are already used in a wide array 
  of consumer products — become so small they are affected by quantum forces.
“We are not talking about an immediate application,” says Ho Bun 
  Chan, an assistant professor of physics and the first author of a paper on the 
  findings that appears today in the online edition of the journal Physical Review 
  Letters.
“We are talking about, if the devices continue to be smaller and smaller, 
  as the trend of miniaturization occurs, then the quantum effects could come 
  into play.”
More specifically, the finding could one day help reduce what MEMS engineers 
  call “stiction” — when two very small, very close objects 
  tend to stick together.
Although stiction has many causes — including, for example, the presence 
  of water molecules that tend to clump together — the Casimir force can 
  contribute. Such quantum effects could prove important as the separations between 
  components in tiny machinery shrink from micrometer, or millionths of a meter, 
  toward nanometer size, Chan said.
“A lot of people are thinking of ways to reduce stiction, and this research 
  opens up one possibility,” he said.
Dutch physicist Hendrik Casimir first predicted that two closely spaced metal 
  plates would be mutually attracted in 1948. It took several decades, but in 
  1996, physicist Steve Lamoreaux, then at the University of Washington, performed 
  the first accurate measurement of the Casimir force using a torsional pendulum, 
  an instrument for measuring very weak forces.
Subsequently, in a paper published in Science in 2001, Chan and other members 
  of a Bell Labs team reported tapping the Casimir force to move a tiny metal 
  see-saw. The researchers suspended a metal sphere an extremely tiny but well-controlled 
  distance above the see-saw to “push” it up and down. It was the 
  first demonstration of the Casimir force affecting a micromechanical device.
In the latest research, the physicists radically altered the shape of the metal 
  plates, corrugating them into evenly spaced trenches so that they resembled 
  a kind of three-dimensional comb. They then compared the Casimir forces generated 
  by these corrugated objects with those generated by standard plates, all also 
  against a metal sphere.
The result? “The force is smaller for the corrugated object but not as 
  small as we anticipated,” Chan said, adding that if corrugating the metal 
  reduced its total area by half, the Casimir force was reduced by only 30 to 
  40 percent.
Chan said the experiment shows that it is not possible to simply add the force 
  on the constituent solid parts of the plate — in this case, the tines 
  — to arrive at the total force. Rather, he said, “the force actually 
  depends on the geometry of the object.” 
“Until now, no significant or nontrivial corrections to the Casimir force 
  due to boundary conditions have been observed experimentally,” wrote Lamoreaux, 
  now at Yale University, in a commentary accompanying publication of the paper.
Besides Chan, the other authors of the paper are UF doctoral students Yiliang 
  Bao and Jie Zou, and Bell Labs scientists Raymond Cirelli, Fred Klemens, William 
  Mansfield and Chien-Shing Pai. The research was funded by the U.S. Department 
  of Energy.