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I am not a physic major rather a enthusiast and wanted to ask about the casimir effect between the tip of a top to the ground, after watching a guy spinning a top in the TV?

Certainly there may not be any such effect between a top and the air-interface (may be I am wrong) but how about the tip and the group it touches (if real)?

  • It's not a specific problem, rather a curiosity. Please consider to open it.
jomegaA
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    What is "the top". The Casimir effect is a quantum effect. It's not about tops. – mike stone Oct 02 '21 at 21:25
  • When you say "top," do you mean a toy spinning top or something else? Is "the group it touches" a typo for "the ground it touches"? By the way, I am confused by how you wrote "the top"; I think that maybe you meant to write "a top" instead. – Tanner Swett Oct 02 '21 at 21:29

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