By a detector, one has in mind a point particle with internal energy levels, which when set in motion on a generic trajectory can get excited due to its interaction with a quantum field. Detectors have often been considered as a helpful tool to understand the concept of a particle in a curved spacetime. Specifically, they have been used extensively to investigate the thermal effects that arise in the presence of horizons. In this article, I review the concept of detectors and discuss their response when they are coupled linearly as well as non-linearly to a quantum scalar field in different situations. In particular, I discuss as to how the response of detectors does not necessarily reflect the particle content of the quantum field. I also describe an interesting ‘inversion of statistics’ that occurs in odd spacetime dimensions for ‘odd couplings’, i.e. the response of a uniformly accelerating detector is characterized by a Fermi–Dirac distribution even when it is interacting with a scalar field. Moreover, by coupling the detector to a quantum field that is governed by a modified dispersion relation arising supposedly due to quantum gravitational effects, I examine the possible Planck scale modifications to the response of a rotating detector in flat spacetime. Lastly, I discuss as to why detectors that are switched on for a finite period of time need to be turned on smoothly in order to have a meaningful response.
CITATION STYLE
Sriramkumar, L. (2017). What Do Detectors Detect? In Fundamental Theories of Physics (Vol. 187, pp. 451–478). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51700-1_27
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