|  Thermal or Black-Body Radiation | 
In General > s.a. radiation [including pressure];
  physical constants [Stefan-Boltzmann constant].
  * Idea: Radiation emitted by a
    perfectly absorbing and emitting body at a fixed temperature T; It
    describes (maximum) heat transfer from an object in the far field; The calculation
    of its spectrum was "a loose thread that when tugged (by Planck) would
    eventually unravel the entire fabric of what had passed for reality."
  * Spectrum: It is given by the
    Planck distribution
E(f, T) df = (2πh/c2) (f 3 / ehf/kT −1) df .
  * Stefan-Boltzmann law: For a
    macroscopic black body at temperature T, the total energy emitted per unit
    surface and unit time is E = σT 4,
    with σ the Stefan-Boltzmann constant.
  * Wien's law: For a macroscopic black
    body at temperature T, λmax
    = (0.0029 m/K) T −1.
  * Deviations from the general relations:
    When the size of the radiating body approaches the typical wavelength of the emitted
    radiation, the spectrum and radiation rate need to be calculated using a more general
    and detailed theory rather than following Planck's law, based on fluctuational
    electrodynamics and the fluctuation-dissipation theorem, and using the object's
    shape and absorption characteristics.
  > Online resources:
    see Wikipedia's Planck law page.
Phenomenology and Related Effects
  > s.a. temperature [and Lorentz transformations].
  * Energy-level shifts and induced forces:
    Blackbody radiation around hot objects induces ac Stark shifts of the energy levels of nearby
    atoms and molecules; These shifts are roughly proportional to the fourth power of the temperature
    and induce a force decaying with the third power of the distance from the object.
  @ General references: Silva e Costa PLA(04) [as seen by moving observer];
    Balasanyan & Mkrtchian a0907 [drag on a relativistic moving mirror];
    Sonnleitner et al PRL(13)
    + news pw(13)jul [net attractive force between tiny objects].
  @ Radiative heat transfer:
    Francoeur & Mengüç JQSRT(08) [and fluctuational electrodynamics];
    Golyk et al EPL(13)-a1210 [between curved objects, small-distance expansion];
    > s.a. Heat Flow.
References
  > s.a. light and thermodynamic systems [thermal light].
  @ General: Planck 06;
    Agnese et al NCB(99) [simple];
    Chang & Guan qp/04 [in a compact space];
    Boyer FP(07) [and relativity and discrete charge];
    Kramm & Herbert a0801 [using dimensional analysis];
    Kramm & Mölders a0901;
    Smerlak EJP(11) [more consistent derivation];
    Marr & Wilkin AJP(12)may [Planck's law in introductory physics];
    Ford & O'Connell PRE(13)-a1310 [Lorentz transformation of blackbody radiation].
  @ Quantum aspects:
    Boya et al qp/00 [multiphoton states];
    Greffet et al Nat(02)mar,
    Greffet & Henkel CP(07) [coherent emission];
    Johansen JOB(04)qp.
  @ History: Wedgwood PTRS(1782);
    Boya RACZ(03)phy/04 [Planck 1900];
    Varró FNL(06)qp [Einstein's fluctuation formula];
    Carvalho Martins a1308-ln [and quantum theory];
    Persson AJP(18)dec
      [presentation of the history of Planck's blackbody radiation equation];
    Boyer AJP(18)jul [in classical electrodynamics].
  @ Coupling to atoms: Fröhlich & Merkli CMP(04)mp [return to equilibrium].
  @ Classical derivation: Marshall NC(65);
    Boyer PRD(84) [from equivalence principle and zero-point radiation].
  @ Relativistic: Lee & Cleaver a1507 [inertial and non-inertial reference frames].
  @ Quantum-gravity motivated corrections:
    Kim et al PRD(07)-a0705 [in κ-Minkowski spacetime];
    Mania & Maziashvili PLB(11)-a0911 [minimum-length corrections];
    Husain et al PRD(13)-a1305 [and evidence for dimensional reduction];
    Ramos & Boschi PhyA(14)-a1404 [with compact extra dimensions].
  @ Nanoscale objects: Wuttke & Rauschenbeutel PRL(13)-a1209
    + news pw(12)sep [and fluctuational electrodynamics];
    > s.a. QED phenomenology.
  @ Other variations: García-García PRA(08)-a0709 [finite-size corrections];
    Moreira & Ribeiro a1512
      [massive-photon generalization of the Stefan-Boltzmann law];
    > s.a. GUP phenomenology.
 main page
  – abbreviations
  – journals – comments
  – other sites – acknowledgements
  send feedback and suggestions to bombelli at olemiss.edu – modified 20 sep 2020