Nonequilibrium fixed points in longitudinally expanding scalar theories: Infrared cascade, Bose condensation, and a challenge for kinetic theory

J. Berges, K. Boguslavski, S. Schlichting, and R. Venugopalan
Phys. Rev. D 92, 096006 – Published 5 November 2015

Abstract

In [Phys. Rev. Lett. 114, 061601 (2015)], we reported on a new universality class for longitudinally expanding systems, encompassing strongly correlated non-Abelian plasmas and N-component self-interacting scalar field theories. Using classical-statistical methods, we showed that these systems share the same self-similar scaling properties for a wide range of momenta in a limit where particles are weakly coupled but their occupancy is high. Here we significantly expand on our previous work and delineate two further self-similar regimes. One of these occurs in the deep infrared (IR) regime of very high occupancies, where the nonequilibrium dynamics leads to the formation of a Bose-Einstein condensate. The universal IR scaling exponents and the spectral index characterizing the isotropic IR distributions are described by an effective theory derived from a systematic large-N expansion at next-to-leading order. Remarkably, this effective theory can be cast as a vertex-resummed kinetic theory. The other novel self-similar regime occurs close to the hard physical scale of the theory, and sets in only at later times. We argue that the important role of the infrared dynamics ensures that key features of our results for scalar and gauge theories cannot be reproduced consistently in conventional kinetic theory frameworks.

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  • Received 3 September 2015

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.92.096006

© 2015 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. Berges1,2, K. Boguslavski1,*, S. Schlichting3, and R. Venugopalan3

  • 1Institut für Theoretische Physik, Universität Heidelberg, Philosophenweg 16, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany
  • 2ExtreMe Matter Institute (EMMI), GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH, Planckstraße 1, 64291 Darmstadt, Germany
  • 3Brookhaven National Laboratory, Physics Department, Building 510A, Upton, New York 11973, USA

  • *Corresponding author. k.boguslavski@thphys.uni-heidelberg.de

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Issue

Vol. 92, Iss. 9 — 1 November 2015

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