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      Bose–Einstein condensation and thermalization of the quark–gluon plasma

      , , , ,
      Nuclear Physics A
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          In ultra-relativistic heavy ion collisions, the matter formed shortly after the collision is a dense, out of equilibrium, system of gluons characterized by a semi-hard momentum scale $Q_{\rm s}$. Simple power counting arguments indicate that this system is over-occupied: the gluon occupation number is parametrically large when compared to a system in thermal equilibrium with the same energy density. On short time scales, soft elastic scatterings tend to drive the system towards the formation of a Bose--Einstein condensate that contains a large fraction of the gluons while contributing little to the energy density. The lifetime and existence of this condensate depends on whether inelastic processes, that occur on the same time scale as the elastic ones, preferably increase or decrease the number of gluons. During this overpopulated stage, and all the way to thermalization, the system behaves as a strongly interacting fluid, even though the elementary coupling constant is small. We argue that while complete isotropization may never be reached, the system may yet evolve for a long time with a fixed anisotropy between average longitudinal and transverse momenta.

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          Ultraviolet avalanche in anisotropic non-Abelian plasmas

          We present solutions of coupled particle-field evolution in classical U(1) and SU(2) gauge theories in real time on three-dimensional lattices. For strongly anisotropic particle momentum distributions, we find qualitatively different behavior for the two theories when the field strength is high enough that non-Abelian self-interactions matter for SU(2). It appears that the energy drained by a Weibel-like plasma instability from the particles does not build up exponentially in transverse magnetic fields but instead returns, isotropically, to the hard scale via a rapid avalanche into the ultraviolet.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Nuclear Physics A
            Nuclear Physics A
            Elsevier BV
            03759474
            January 2012
            January 2012
            : 873
            : 68-80
            Article
            10.1016/j.nuclphysa.2011.10.005
            42a4e4d7-42f5-46db-b470-33dd83271bf7
            © 2012

            https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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