Nonlocal effects in black body radiation
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Publication:2950366
Abstract: Nonlocal electrodynamics is a formalism developed to include nonlocal effects in the measurement process caused by the non-inertial state of the observers. This theory modifies Maxwell's electrodynamics by eliminating the hypothesis of locality that assumes an accelerated observer simultaneously equivalent to a comoving inertial frame of reference. In this scenario, the transformation between an inertial and accelerated observer is generalized which affects the properties of physical fields. In particular, we analyze how an uniformly accelerated observer perceives a homogeneous and isotropic blackbody radiation. We show that all nonlocal effects are transient and most relevant in the first period of acceleration.
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Cites work
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3140813 (Why is no real title available?)
- scientific article; zbMATH DE number 3084878 (Why is no real title available?)
- Acceleration-induced nonlocality: kinetic memory versus dynamic memory
- Acceleration-induced nonlocality: uniqueness of the kernel
- Electrodynamics in accelerated frames revisited
- Nonlocal Lagrangians for accelerated systems
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