Field propulsion
Field propulsion comprises proposed and researched concepts and production technologies of spacecraft propulsion in which thrust is generated by coupling a vehicle to external fields or ambient media rather than by expelling onboard propellant. In this broad sense, field propulsion schemes are thermodynamically open systems that exchange momentum or energy with their surroundings; for example, a field propulsion system may couple itself to photon streams, radiation, magnetized plasma, or planetary magnetospheres. Familiar exemplars include solar sails, electrodynamic tethers, and magnetic sails. By contrast, hypothetical reactionless drives are closed systems that would claim to produce net thrust without any external interaction, widely regarded as violating the law of conservation of momentum and the Standard Model of physics.
Within aerospace engineering research, the label spans both established and proposed approaches that "push off" external reservoirs: photonic pressure from sunlight, charged particle streams such as the solar wind, and interactions with planetary magnetospheres and ionospheric environments. In narrower usage, the term also covers efforts to engineer field–matter coupling using electromagnetic propulsion as well as speculative mechanisms that draw on general relativity, quantum field theory, or zero-point energy ideas to alter effective inertia or to couple directly to non-particulate fields of space.
Several elements of field-coupled propulsion have been successfully demonstrated in the laboratory, field tests, and in low Earth orbit—most notably, sails and tethers. No field propulsion method has yet been validated as a practical primary propulsion system for interplanetary or interstellar missions, and are currently known to be limited to orbital operations. Even so, the prospect of exchanging momentum with external energy or matter reservoirs continues to motivate exploratory work. The topic remains active in targeted programs such as NASA's former Breakthrough Propulsion Physics Program as well as in studies by national space agencies, academic research groups, and industry organizations that investigate propellantless or externally powered alternatives to conventional rocket engines and electric propulsion systems.
Definition
The term field propulsion refers to propellant-less propulsion systems in which thrust arises from interactions with external fields or ambient media, rather than from the sustained expulsion of onboard reaction mass or reliance on solid chemical fuels. Examples include solar sails, magnetic sails, and electrodynamic tethers, which couple with external photon, plasma, or magnetic fields instead of expelling onboard propellant. Various types of field propulsion concepts include mechanisms where motion results from environmental coupling rather than from carrying and ejecting propellant. Field propulsion is not a single technology but a spectrum of approaches, ranging from mature concepts that have been tested in flight to highly speculative theoretical constructs.Broad definitions often include solar sail systems, such as the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's IKAROS mission, which demonstrated propulsion by harnessing radiation pressure from sunlight. Examples include systems that attempt to draw on the photon field of sunlight, the charged particles of the solar wind, or the magnetic fields of planetary environments. In a similar spirit, magnetic sail concepts proposed by Dana Andrews and Robert Zubrin envision the use of large magnetic fields to couple with the solar wind and thereby transfer momentum to the spacecraft. Narrower definitions, however, focus on experimental electromagnetic propulsion mechanisms, including electrohydrodynamics and magnetohydrodynamics, as well as more speculative proposals that invoke general relativity, quantum field theory, or zero-point energy as possible pathways to modify inertia or couple directly to the structured quantum vacuum. By interacting with such external reservoirs, a spacecraft can "push off" the surrounding medium, converting environmental energy or momentum into acceleration. In contrast, conventional rockets achieve motion by expelling mass. Most commonly, this is the combustion output from chemical propellants to generate thrust via Newton's third law, which is the familiar rocket launch with explosive flame and smoke beneath it.
Conservation of momentum is a fundamental requirement of propulsion systems because momentum is always conserved. This conservation law is implicit in the published work of Isaac Newton and Galileo Galilei, but arises on a fundamental level from the spatial translation symmetry of the laws of physics, as given by Noether's theorem. For instance, MHD drives accelerate conductive fluids using electromagnetic fields, resulting in thrust through the Lorentz force, with momentum conserved via interaction with external media, such as the interplanetary or interstellar media, or solar winds. Open systems comply with the conservation of momentum by transferring it to or from the surrounding environment. Environment-coupled approaches such as sails, tethers, or plasma-wave coupling remain possible if the method of external coupling is strong enough. Reviews of field propulsion concepts emphasize that any open system must exchange momentum with an external medium such as photons, plasma, or magnetic fields, while closed-system "reactionless" claims conflict with this framework.
Some field propulsion reviews note that open systems exchange momentum or energy with external media and that proposals of closed-system 'reactionless drive' propulsion are viewed with skepticism because they conflict with thermodynamic laws. In contrast, such reactionless drives are hypothetical closed systems that claim to produce thrust without exchanging momentum with an external entity, thereby violating the conservation of momentum, and are widely regarded as inconsistent with established scientific principles. Momentum conservation is the fundamental boundary on all propulsion concepts. Academic reviews echo this conclusion, stating that propulsion systems which generate thrust without reaction mass or interaction with external fields are regarded as inconsistent with the present framework of physics. Any propulsion system that purports to generate net thrust in a closed system without external interaction challenges this principle and is considered physically untenable under the Standard Model of physics, and would require physics beyond the Standard Model to be viable.
History of research and programs
Image:STS-75 Tethered Satellite System deployment.jpg|thumb|Medium close-up view, captured with a 70 mm camera, shows tethered satellite system deployment in 1996 during STS-75.Traditional rocketry has dominated aerospace propulsion in the 20th and early 21st centuries. Beginning in the 1960s as spaceflight programs expanded, contractor studies for the U.S. Air Force and NASA organized advanced and theorized advanced propulsion concepts under three main headings: Thermal, Field, and Photon, so that unconventional ideas for spaceflight could be compared within a common framework.NASA JPL Beam/Field Concepts 1983" /> Within this taxonomy, "field" referred broadly to approaches that might exchange momentum or energy with external reservoirs, such as plasmas, magnetic fields, or directed energy sources, and therefore contrasted with both conventional rockets and nuclear-thermal designs. These early surveys tended to treat such concepts as long-range prospects rather than near-term flight systems, but they kept the terminology of "field" propulsion alive in successive planning cycles.
During the 1960s through the 1990s, electric and electromagnetic propulsion matured experimentally, with some systems flying in limited operational roles even as they continued to rely on propellant despite their strong field components. By contrast, the more speculative end of the spectrum such as concepts that couple to the environment without carrying reaction mass, remained in the research phase. A 1972 report from the Air Force Rocket Propulsion Laboratory, followed by Jet Propulsion Laboratory studies in 1975 and 1982, formalized this division by publishing roadmaps that again divided advanced concepts into Thermal, Field, and Photon classes. These reports emphasized "infinite specific impulse" systems that would obtain energy or working fluid from the ambient environment, and suggested that new advances in lasers and superconductors might breathe new life into earlier discarded concepts such as laser propulsion or ramjets.
By the late 1990s, NASA’s Breakthrough Propulsion Physics program framed research around the goals of propulsion with no propellant mass, maximum physically possible transit speeds, breakthrough energy sources, and emphasized empirical testability. It also raised the question of whether any propellantless effects could exist without violating conservation of momentum and energy. Later NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts studies continued in the same mold, examining whether Alfvén wave coupling or other plasma interactions might provide quasi-propellantless thrust. Across all of these efforts, surveys at the physics frontier acknowledged the conceptual appeal of field propulsion but also stressed the unresolved consistency issues that arise when no clear external momentum channel can be identified. By STS-75 in 1996 and LightSail 1 and LightSail 2 between 2015 and 2019, functional field propulsion systems were active in outer space.
Scope, terminology, and programmatic efforts
Published technical surveys and program documents use "field" or field-adjacent language in different ways. Contractor studies for NASA grouped "advanced" options under headings such as Thermal Propulsion, Field Propulsion, and Photon Propulsion, with "field" covering externally powered and field-interactive concepts beyond conventional rocketry. NASA's Breakthrough Propulsion Physics effort set research goals that explicitly included "propulsion that requires no propellant mass," maximum physically possible transit speeds, and breakthrough energy methods to power such devices, framing the field propulsion question in terms of fundamental physics limits and testable claims. Framed with an emphasis on empirical testability, the BPP stated three goals: propulsion that requires no propellant mass, transit at the maximum speeds physically possible, and breakthrough energy sources to power such devices. Separately, NIAC funded studies on using ambient plasmas and magnetic fields to generate thrust without expelling onboard propellant, including Alfvén-wave coupling concepts.In practice, the viability of any open field-coupled concept depends on coupling strength to the surrounding environment. For example, momentum exchange with the solar wind or a magnetosphere scales with local plasma density, magnetic-field magnitude, and wave/field interaction efficiency; in weak or highly variable environments, thrust and control authority are correspondingly limited. These constraints contrast with classical chemical and conventional electric rockets, whose performance is governed primarily by onboard propellant and its energy, reflecting fundamental engineering limits on achievable exhaust velocity and energy density. Electromagnetic propulsion reviews describe solid-propellant pulsed plasma, magnetoplasmadynamic systems, and pulsed inductive thrusters as electromagnetic spaceflight technologies. Physics-frontier program statements set three goals that included "propulsion that requires no propellant mass," maximum physically possible transit speeds, and breakthrough energy sources. Later NIAC work examined momentum exchange with ambient plasmas and magnetic fields as propellantless or quasi-propellantless mechanisms. Hypothetical field propulsion systems, in contrast, are framed in the literature as propellantless but encounter dependence on external media and unresolved consistency with conservation laws.
Beamed-energy and field-interactive
Beamed-energy propulsion sends power from a remote source directly to a spacecraft propulsion system, using directed-energy technologies such as lasers, microwaves, or relativistic charged-particle beams, so that the propulsion power source remains independent of the spacecraft. A NASA contractor report, Advanced Beamed-Energy and Field Propulsion Concepts, surveyed beamed-energy and field propulsion concepts, seeking improvements beyond chemical rocket propulsion to achieve large gains in payload, range, and terminal velocity, and focused on systems where power is beamed to the vehicle by laser, microwave, or relativistic charged particle beams so that the power source remains independent of the spacecraft. The NASA report organized prospects into thermal, field, and photon classes and identified enabling technologies as then-potential paths to field propulsion prospects. It also described large swings in advanced propulsion funding over the previous decades, and highlighted significant studies by AFRPL and JPL as part of that history. The study emphasized a return to the unrestricted creativity and "free-thinking" that characterized propulsion research in the late 1950s and early 1960s.The AFRPL study concluded that propulsion researchers should focus on "infinite specific impulse" concepts that draw both working fluid and energy from the ambient environment, because of their implications for outstanding performance. Some approaches use atmospheric or environmental material as working fluid or interaction medium, drawing reaction mass or momentum exchange from the ambient environment rather than from onboard propellant. Proposals also include advanced electrostatic and MHD-based concepts that could leverage charged particle interactions with atmospheric fields or ionospheric plasmas and geomagnetic fields to produce directed motion. The study suggested improvements in technologies like high-power lasers or new energy transfer methods could revitalize previously discarded propulsion ideas, including laser propulsion and infinite-Isp ramjets.
Forward extended beamed-sail studies to the interstellar scale, suggesting that phased solar-system lasers could impart sustained acceleration to ultralight sails across astronomical distances. He calculated that such a system might accelerate a probe to ~0.11 c and reach Alpha Centauri in about four decades, bringing the timescale of an interstellar flyby to within a human lifetime.
Electromagnetic propulsion
The 1964 Zond 2 mission to Mars from the Soviet Union marked the first planetary use of electric propulsion, followed by successive U.S. deployments culminating in the Nova satellite series. A NASA electromagnetic-propulsion review identified three main types of electromagnetic propulsion systems: pulsed plasma thrusters, magnetoplasmadynamic thrusters, and pulsed inductive thrusters. The review noted benefits of using electromagnetic thrusters include their ability to provide precision for satellite positioning, high specific impulse, robustness, high power processing capability, and simplicity; pulsed thrusters also permit relatively simple system level scaling with available spacecraft power.PPTs are the only electromagnetic thrusters used on operational satellites, though both PPT and MPD thrusters have been flown in space. These efforts culminated in first flights of solid propellant pulsed plasma thrusters in the Soviet Union in 1964 and in the United States in 1968. Developed in the late 1960s, these thrusters initiate an arc discharge across a solid fluorinated polymer bar, ablating a small amount of propellant and accelerating it by the Lorentz body force. PPTs had already flown for attitude/drag makeup; MPD devices had space heritage in experimental regimes; and PITs sought to reduce electrode-erosion limits by inductive coupling. Unlike later concepts relying on inductive or steady-state operation, PPTs utilize compact, low-power, pulsed configurations suitable for satellite positioning and drag compensation.
MPDs are another major class of electromagnetic propulsion systems investigated for both quasi-steady and steady-state spaceflight applications. MPDs operate through the Lorentz force generated by the interaction of discharge currents with self-induced or externally applied magnetic fields.
PITs are a form of electromagnetic propulsion developed to overcome the erosion and lifetime limitations of electrode-based systems. By inducing plasma currents through time-varying magnetic fields, PITs accelerate neutral propellants without requiring physical contact between conductors and plasma. The concept originated in the late 1960s and evolved through successive experimental designs focused on performance scaling, circuit optimization, and propellant compatibility. Although no PIT system has flown in space, the thruster class remains of interest due to its potential for high-efficiency, long-duration propulsion with minimal material degradation, particularly in missions requiring flexible propellant selection and reduced contamination risk.
Ambient-environment coupling
A NIAC Phase I study evaluated "ambient plasma wave propulsion," focusing on momentum exchange with existing space environments via waves such as Alfvén modes, alongside sails and electrodynamic tethers, as candidates for propellantless or quasi-propellantless thrust. The study highlighted the appeal of no onboard reaction mass requirements for the method, combined with limits such as technical immaturity and shortfall of such concepts for significant maneuvering capabilities.Physics-frontier research
NASA's Breakthrough Propulsion Physics memo framed research questions at the limits of physics—no-propellant propulsion, ultimate transit speeds, and breakthrough energy production—explicitly to sort physically testable ideas from non-viable claims. Minami and Musha in their 2012 study reviewed proposals that treat space as having a substantial physical structure, described at macroscopic scales by general relativity and at microscopic scales by quantum field theory. They outline mechanisms such as vacuum polarization, engineered spacetime curvature, and zero-point field interactions. Their study frames the topic for this branch of field propulsion as theoretical as of 2012, and point to engineering that would excite localized regions of space.This dual framework places field propulsion concepts at the intersection of general relativity, which treats spacetime as a dynamic geometry, and quantum field theory, where the vacuum hosts fluctuating fields and latent energy. Several mechanisms have been theorized to achieve such coupling, including spacetime-curvature effects in general relativity and interactions with electromagnetic zero-point fields in quantum field theory. Vacuum-fluctuation phenomena such as the Casimir effect have been measured in many precision experiments and are reviewed extensively in the mainstream literature. However, attempts to obtain net thrust or a gravity coupling from static electromagnetic configurations have not produced reproducible anomalous forces in controlled tests.
Types
A wide range of space propulsion methods have been proposed or demonstrated that fit within broad definitions of field propulsion. These systems do not rely on conventional chemical rockets, but instead seek to generate thrust by interacting with external media or applying directed energy fields. The following list highlights representative concepts. One group of field propulsion concepts comprises environment-coupled systems that utilize their surroundings to produce thrust, including solar sails, magnetic sails, and, with certain restrictions, electrodynamic tethers, which use the solar wind or ambient magnetic fields to generate thrust; in an example design, a magnetic sail uses a loop of superconducting cable to create a magnetic field that deflects solar wind plasma and imparts momentum to the attached spacecraft. Electrically driven electromagnetic propulsion systems use strong electromagnetic fields to accelerate propellant plasma. A further and more speculative class invokes direct interactions with a structured vacuum or with spacetime geometry, proposing thrust without any expulsion of mass, an idea surveyed in the general relativity and quantum field theory literature but not empirically validated.This layered taxonomy reflects the way that contractor reports and program reviews organized the subject during the late twentieth century. In contemporary technical reviews it is common to reserve the term "field propulsion" for schemes that exchange momentum with external reservoirs, since those remain consistent with conservation of momentum when an identifiable medium supplies the counterforce. By contrast, devices such as PPT, MPD, and PIT thrusters—although dominated by internal electromagnetic fields—are placed within the broader family of electric propulsion because their exhaust streams provide the reaction mass that enforces momentum balance. Academic surveys distinguish environment-coupled concepts from electric-propulsion devices that expel carried propellant, separating speculative field-coupled ideas from near-term electric technologies.
Beamed-energy and externally powered thrust
Microwave electrothermal thrusters use microwave energy—potentially externally supplied—to heat a fluid propellant. When powered externally, it falls under beamed-energy propulsion with mass acceleration via directed fields. Laser ablation propulsion: uses pulsed laser energy to ablate onboard material to produce plasma and thrust. Though it expels mass, the energy source is external, placing it within the domain of beamed field-accelerated propulsion systems. No spaceflights to date; research has been limited to laboratory testing and subscale atmospheric Lightcraft demonstrations, with orbital proposals remaining unflown. Photonic laser thrusters are a photon-pressure system that relies on externally beamed lasers instead of sunlight.Electric and electromagnetic with carried propellant
Several devices central to electromagnetic propulsion rely on strong fields yet remain conventional in the momentum sense because they accelerate carried propellant. Representative families include pulsed plasma thrusters, magnetoplasmadynamic thrusters, and pulsed-inductive thrusters, each with distinct trade-offs in lifetime, efficiency, and power scaling; PPTs have flown for attitude and drag makeup, MPD has flight heritage in experimental regimes, and PIT remains ground-tested.Within the electric-propulsion family, these devices illustrate how strong fields can dominate the internal acceleration physics while momentum closure still proceeds through exhaust. In programmatic roadmaps, these technologies frequently serve as baselines for comparison with environment-coupled concepts, anchoring expectations for power-to-thrust ratios, lifetime, and system mass at mission-relevant scales. Electron cyclotron resonance thrusters use electron cyclotron resonance to ionize and accelerate a gaseous propellant, particularly in ionospheric or high-altitude environments. ECRs using electron cyclotron resonance with microwave discharge have flown in space, most notably as the μ10 ion engine system on JAXA's Hayabusa and Hayabusa2 asteroid missions.
Environment-coupled, propellantless momentum exchange
These systems generate thrust by exchanging momentum with external fields, without expelling onboard reaction mass.Solar sails produce continuous, low-thrust acceleration by exchanging momentum with incident photons from the Sun; because the counter-momentum is supplied by the external photon field, they fall under broad definitions of field-coupled propulsion rather than reaction-mass ejection. As with other environment-coupled concepts, performance depends on the available flux—in this case solar irradiance and sail reflectivity—and falls with distance from the Sun, motivating large, lightweight structures and precise attitude control schemes. Sailcraft engineering couples ultra-light structures to stringent pointing and thermal constraints. Square and heliogyro designs use thin film sails on deployable booms; reliable deployment of large, low-mass structures and thin films is a key challenge. Typical sail films have reflective front coats and high-emissivity back coats; wrinkling and billowing reduce efficiency. Once deployed, thrust is almost normal to the sail, so small attitude changes steer the thrust vector.
Performance evolves with materials science and control: lower areal density directly increases acceleration, and by canting the sail the small continuous thrust can be steered for precise trajectory shaping. Forward outlined a proposed method of how solar-system-based laser systems and a ~1,000 km diameter Fresnel zone "para-lens" could propel thin-film sails to ~0.11 c, enabling an unmanned flyby of Alpha Centauri in approximately 40 years. In Forward's proposal, a two-stage sail system in which a massive ring sail reflects laser light back onto a detached payload sail, enabling the unmanned spacecraft to rendezvous and brake within the Alpha Centauri system.
Magnetic sails generate thrust by coupling a spacecraft-supported magnetic field to the solar wind, transferring momentum from the ambient charged particle flow to the vehicle. Analyses of magnetic sail concepts indicate thrust arises from deflecting the solar wind around a spacecraft-supported magnetic field, with performance set by the stand-off distance at which solar-wind dynamic pressure balances the sail's magnetic pressure; larger effective magnetic cross-sections increase momentum transfer but require large-radius, high-current superconducting coils. Magnetic sails include essentially propellantless acceleration and deceleration by interaction with the solar wind and interstellar medium, since the sail exchanges momentum with the surrounding plasma instead of expelling onboard propellant. Key engineering challenges include the mass and size of the superconducting loop and the constraints imposed by achievable superconducting currents and magnetic fields.
Mission studies of magnetic sails show that they can perform heliocentric transfers between circular orbits by using the solar wind for outbound acceleration and inbound braking. Magsails have also been proposed for interstellar missions, where interaction with the interstellar medium provides propellantless terminal deceleration into a destination solar system. The design tradeoffs emphasize achieving a large effective magnetic cross-section for the superconducting loop while keeping its mass low. Magnetospheric plasma propulsion is a NIAC proposal by Robert Winglee, in which plasma injection inflates a magnetic bubble that couples with the solar wind. It is considered a variant of magnetic sails.
Electromagnetic systems use electric and magnetic fields to accelerate plasma or ions. Electrodynamic propulsion systems interact with ambient magnetic or plasma fields to generate thrust without conventional propellant. The most studied examples are electrodynamic tethers, which generate Lorentz-force-based drag or thrust by coupling with a planetary magnetic field. Electrodynamic propulsion falls under broad definitions of field propulsion due to their use of external fields for momentum exchange. These systems have been deployed and used in space on a number of space tether missions, including the TSS-1, TSS-1R, and Plasma Motor Generator experiments. Electrodynamic tethers exchange momentum with a planetary magnetosphere or ionosphere via Lorentz forces on a long current-carrying conductor, enabling drag or thrust without propellant in suitable environments. As open systems, they conserve momentum by reaction with the ambient plasma and magnetic field. In operation, a conductive tether moving through a planetary magnetic field experiences a motional electromotive force; closing the circuit through the ambient ionosphere allows current to flow, and the resulting Lorentz force can provide either drag or, with external power injection, thrust along specific orbital geometries. Electrodynamic tethers can also generate electrical power at the expense of orbital energy.
Alfvén wave / RF-driven plasma wave propulsiom proposes using radio-frequency-driven Alfvén waves to couple with ambient magnetic and plasma fields, generating thrust without expelling onboard reaction mass. These waves propagate along magnetic field lines and can transfer momentum to space plasma, making the system a candidate for propellantless thrust. NIAC studies have examined using radio-frequency waves launched from a vehicle to couple with ambient plasma and magnetic fields, transferring momentum to the environment and producing propellantless thrust. The 2011 Phase I assessment found the approach technically immature but potentially enabling if sensitivity and power challenges can be overcome.
Magnetohydrodynamic interaction concepts extending magnetohydrodynamics to space plasma propose generating thrust by exchanging momentum with ambient charged particles via Lorentz-force coupling. If the interacting plasma is external, the system qualifies as field propulsion. If the plasma is internally supplied and expelled, it instead falls under electromagnetic or electrothermal propulsion.
Environment-fed electric propulsion
Atmosphere-breathing electric propulsion is a concept where spacecraft collect ambient particles in low orbit, ionize them, and accelerate them using electromagnetic fields. It avoids onboard propellant but still involves mass acceleration. Ground prototypes have been tested, but not yet flown in space. Closest heritage are ion thrusters and Hall-effect thrusters, which have flown widely and demonstrate the same field-acceleration principle with onboard propellant. These systems accelerate onboard or environmental particles using electromagnetic, electrostatic, or directed energy fields. Some may still require onboard mass or atmospheric medium.Field-interaction in atmosphere or dense media
Although not presently in wide use for space, there exist proven terrestrial examples of field propulsion in which electromagnetic fields act upon a conducting medium such as seawater or plasma for propulsion, known collectively as magnetohydrodynamics. MHD is similar in operation to electric motors, however rather than using moving parts or metal conductors, fluid or plasma conductors are employed. The EMS-1 and more recently the Yamato 1 are examples of such electromagnetic Field propulsion systems, first described in 1994.Electrohydrodynamics is another method where electrically charged fluids are accelerated for propulsion and flow control; laboratory and flight demonstrations include devices driven by corona discharge.
Field propulsion based on physical structure of space
Minami and Musha frame field propulsion at the physics frontier as interaction with a "substantial physical structure" of space, drawing on general relativity at macroscopic scales and quantum field theory at microscopic scales. They conclude that future engineering technologies for space travel will most likely require some form of field propulsion to excite properties of localized regions in space. Surveyed mechanisms include vacuum polarization, engineered spacetime curvature, and zero-point-field interactions; none have been experimentally validated, and all face unresolved consistency issues with momentum conservation. Minami and Musha distinguish between two field propulsion concepts: one framed in terms of general relativity and one in terms of quantum field theory.In the general relativistic field propulsion system, space-time is considered to be an elastic field similar to rubber, which means space itself can be treated as an infinite elastic body. In Minami and Musha's framing, propulsive force arises from interaction with a physical structure of space instead of from expelling reaction mass. According to quantum field theory and quantum electrodynamics, the quantum vacuum is modeled as a nonradiating electromagnetic background, existing in a zero-point state, the minimum energy allowed by the theory. Using this on a dielectric material could, via the resulting Lorentz force on bound charges, affect the inertia of the mass and that way create an acceleration of the material without creating stress or strain inside the material.