Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,643
But is this really "negative pressure" like what would happen if you could get a negative reading on a barometer?
Yes. Sol's answer is correct, but I'll give you an alternative reasoning, because if you don't believe the theory behind it, then his answer might not convince you.
In the Casimir effect, the pressure diverges towards infinity as the plate separation approaches zero. If the pressure is negative inside, that's not a problem: all it means is that the slope of the energy vs. volume diverges, the energy inside the plates can still be finite.
But if the pressure is really a positive pressure outside, then we DO have a problem. And the reason it's a problem is that this result doesn't depend on the geometric details outside the plates. Which means that the outside pressure is always infinite. But the only way to get an external pressure that's always infinite is for the external energy density to be infinite as well (actually, you need a negative infinity energy density to get a positive infinity pressure).
So either we've got negative pressure inside the plates which only diverge at one point and our vacuum energy always remains finite, or we've got positive infinite pressure outside, along with infinite negative energy densities. The former solution is acceptable. The latter... is not.
You say it "pulls them together" -- but that isn't what I expect from negative pressure
It should be. A positive pressure between the plates would push the plates outwards. A negative pressure between the plates will therefore pull them inwards. The vacuum pressure outside the plates is negligible.
I'd think the term would mean in outward, apart effect, not an inward together effect
A negative pressure outside the plates would indeed pull the plates outward. But the vacuum pressure outside the plates is negligible. It's the pressure between the plates which is significant enough to measure.