Quantum physics predicts the existence of an underlying
sea of zero-point energy at every point in the universe. This is
different from the cosmic microwave background and is also referred to
as the electromagnetic quantum vacuum since it is the lowest state of
otherwise empty space. This energy is so enormous that most physicists
believe that even though zero-point energy seems to be an inescapable
consequence of elementary quantum theory, it cannot be physically real,
and so is subtracted away in calculations.
A minority of physicists accept it as real energy which
we cannot directly sense since it is the same everywhere, even inside
our bodies and measuring devices. From this perspective, the ordinary
world of matter and energy is like a foam atop the quantum vacuum sea.
It does not matter to a ship how deep the ocean is below it. If the
zero-point energy is real, there is the possibility that it can be
tapped as a source of power or be harnassed to generate a propulsive
force for space travel.
The propellor or the jet engine of an aircraft push air
backwards to propel the aircraft forward. A ship or boat propellor does
the same thing with water. On Earth there is always air or water
available to push against. But a rocket in space has nothing to push
against, and so it needs to carry propellant to eject in place of air or
water. The fundamental problem is that a deep space rocket would have to
start out with all the propellant it will ever need. This quickly
results in the need to carry more and more propellant just to propel the
propellant. The breakthrough one wishes for deep space travel is to
overcome the need to carry propellant at all. How can one generate a
propulsive force without carrying and ejecting propellant?
There is a force associated with the electromagnetic
quantum vacuum: the Casimir force. This force is an attraction between
parallel metallic plates that has now been well measured and can be
attributed to a minutely tiny imbalance in the zero-point energy in the
cavity between versus the region outside the plates. This is not useful
for propulsion since it symmetrically pulls on the plates. However if
some asymmetric variation of the Casimir force could be identified one
could in effect sail through space as if propelled by a kind of quantum
fluctuation wind. This is pure speculation.
The other requirement for space travel is energy. A
thought experiment published by physicist Robert Forward in 1984
demonstrated how the Casimir force could in principle be used to extract
energy from the quantum vacuum (Phys. Rev. B,
30, 1700, 1984). Theoretical studies in the early 1990s (Phys. Rev. E, 48,
1562, 1993) verified that this was not contradictory to the laws of
thermodynamics (since the zero-point energy is different from a thermal
reservoir of heat). Unfortunately the Forward process cannot be cycled
to yield a continuous extraction of energy. A Casimir engine would be
one whose cylinders could only fire once, after which the engine become
useless.
ORIGIN OF ZERO-POINT ENERGY
The basis of zero-point energy is the Heisenberg
uncertainty principle, one of the fundamental laws of quantum physics.
According to this principle, the more precisely one measures the
position of a moving particle, such as an electron, the less exact the
best possible measurement of momentum (mass times velocity) will be, and
vice versa. The least possible uncertainty of position times momentum is
specified by Planck's constant, h. A parallel uncertainty exists between
measurements involving time and energy. This minimum uncertainty is not
due to any correctable flaws in measurement, but rather reflects an
intrinsic quantum fuzziness in the very nature of energy and matter.
A useful calculational tool in physics is the ideal
harmonic oscillator: a hypothetical mass on a perfect spring moving back
and forth. The Heisenberg uncertainty principle dictates that such an
ideal harmonic oscillator -- one small enough to be subject to quantum
laws -- can never come entirely to rest, since that would be a state of
exactly zero energy, which is forbidden. In this case the average
minimum energy is one-half h times the frequency, hf/2.
Radio waves, light, X-rays, and gamma rays are all
forms of electromagnetic radiation. Classically, electromagnetic
radiation can be pictured as waves flowing through space at the speed of
light. The waves are not waves of anything substantive, but are in fact
ripples in a state of a field. These waves do carry energy, and each
wave has a specific direction, frequency and polarization state. This is
called a "propagating mode of the electromagnetic field."
Each mode is subject to the Heisenberg uncertainty
principle. To understand the meaning of this, the theory of
electromagnetic radiation is quantized by treating each mode as an
equivalent harmonic oscillator. From this analogy, every mode of the
field must have hf/2 as its average minimum energy. That is a tiny
amount of energy, but the number of modes is enormous, and indeed
increases as the square of the frequency. The product of the tiny energy
per mode times the huge spatial density of modes yields a very high
theoretical energy density per cubic centimeter.
From this line of reasoning, quantum physics predicts
that all of space must be filled with electromagnetic zero-point
fluctuations (also called the zero-point field) creating a universal sea
of zero-point energy. The density of this energy depends critically on
where in frequency the zero-point fluctuations cease. Since space itself
is thought to break up into a kind of quantum foam at a tiny distance
scale called the Planck scale (10-33 cm), it is argued that
the zero point fluctuations must cease at a corresponding Planck
frequency (1043 Hz). If that is the case, the zero-point
energy density would be 110 orders of magnitude greater than the radiant
energy at the center of the Sun.
CONNECTION TO INERTIA AND GRAVITATION
When a passenger in an airplane feels pushed against
his seat as the airplane accelerates down the runway, or when a driver
feels pushed to the left when her car makes a sharp turn to the right,
what is doing the pushing? Since the time of Newton, this has been
attributed to an innate property of matter called inertia. In 1994 a
process was discovered whereby the zero-point fluctuations could be the
source of the push one feels when changing speed or direction, both
being forms of acceleration. The zero-point fluctuations could be the
underlying cause of inertia. If that is the case, then we are actually
sensing the zero-point energy with every move we make (see origin of inertia).
The principle of equivalence would require an analogous
connection for gravitation. Einstein's general relativity successfully
accounts for the motions of freely-falling objects on geodesics (the
"shortest" distance between two points in curved spacetime), but does
not provide a mechanism for generating a gravitational force for objects
when they are forced to deviate from geodesic tracks. It has been found
that an object undergoing acceleration or one held fixed in a
gravitational field would experience the same kind of asymmetric pattern
in the zero-point field giving rise to such a reaction force. The weight
you measure on a scale would therefore be due to zero-point energy (see
gravitation).
The possibility that electromagnetic zero-point energy
may be involved in the production of inertial and gravitational forces
opens the possibility that both inertia and gravitation might someday be
controlled and manipulated. This could have a profound impact on
propulsion and space travel.