* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download NonequilibriumDynamicsofQuarkGluonPlasma
Wave packet wikipedia , lookup
Canonical quantum gravity wikipedia , lookup
Quantum chaos wikipedia , lookup
Monte Carlo methods for electron transport wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear structure wikipedia , lookup
Quantum gravity wikipedia , lookup
Eigenstate thermalization hypothesis wikipedia , lookup
Old quantum theory wikipedia , lookup
Grand Unified Theory wikipedia , lookup
Quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Quantum electrodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Strangeness production wikipedia , lookup
Kaluza–Klein theory wikipedia , lookup
Elementary particle wikipedia , lookup
Theory of everything wikipedia , lookup
Path integral formulation wikipedia , lookup
Standard Model wikipedia , lookup
Topological quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Mathematical formulation of the Standard Model wikipedia , lookup
Renormalization wikipedia , lookup
Dirac equation wikipedia , lookup
Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation wikipedia , lookup
Yang–Mills theory wikipedia , lookup
Canonical quantization wikipedia , lookup
Quantum chromodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Scale invariance wikipedia , lookup
History of quantum field theory wikipedia , lookup
Scalar field theory wikipedia , lookup
Nonequilibrium Dynamics of Quark Gluon Plasma: Boltzmann-Langevin (Boedeker) Equation Tanja Horn University of Maryland Outline  Introduction    Nonperturbative Physics     Quark Gluon Plasma Relevant Particles and Scales Kinetic Theory Hydrodynamics Effective theories: HTL, LLO, NLLO Langevin Dynamics  Boedeker equation (LLO)   Classical Transport Theory     Fluctuation-Dissipation Relation Master Equation   Origin of noise term in Boedeker equation Linearized Boltzmann equation with forcing term Fokker-Planck equation Particle Dynamics Summary Quark Gluon Plasma (QGP)     State of matter in which quarks and gluons are unconfined. Manifest of asymptotic freedom in Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD) Characteristic phase transition at 10 5  10 6 s in the cosmological standard model. Different models of heavy ion collisions are studied at RHIC/Brookhaven and LHV/CERN. Lifetime of a plasma state is short, so a large fraction of QGP lifetime spent in nonequilibrium states.  Need for an understanding of nonequilibrium in QGP Relevant Particles Length  Degrees of Freedom in QCD     Particles in QGP are characterized by the temperature T and the gauge coupling constant g. Characteristic energy scales    Gluons spin 1 gauge fields, color 1 Quarks spin 2 matter particles QCD: T ~ 200 MeV QGP: T ~ 150 MeV Typical scales for QGP are shown in Table 1. Particle Wavelength Particle Separation Description/ Classification T 1 Hard Modes 1 Thermal Wavelength T Plasma Frequency ( gT ) 1 Semihard Modes Debye Length ( gT ) 1 Screening of static fields at large distances Nonperturbative magnetic scale ( g 2T ) 1 Unscreened magnetic fields Soft modes ( g 2T ) 1 Transport Coefficients        [  v    Fext   ] f ( x , p, t )  C[ f ] t x p •View Boltzmann equation as an effective theory with Quantum Fluctuations integrated out. •On the scale O(T), the dispersion relation of the hard particles is suppressed by O(g2) and collisions can be treated as local collisions. •Hard modes are weakly interacting and can be treated perturbatively. •Method: Linearized Boltzmann equation with Driving Term f ( x, p)  f 0 ( x, p)  f 0 ( x, p)[1  f 0 ( x, p)] f1 ( x, p) C[ f ]  C[ f 0 ]  Cfi Transport Coefficients      [  p   x  Fext   p ] f 0 ( x, p, t )  (Cf1 )( x, p, t ) t Driving Fields: (i) Conductivity: Ei (ii) Diffusion: i  (iii) Shear Viscosity: 1 2 [i u j   j ui   ij  u ] 3 6 Nonperturbative Physics •Perturbation Theory: •At high temperature (T >>mq, T>>  QCD ), g << 1. •Long distance modes of hot nonAbelian gauge fields are strongly coupled resulting in breakdown of perturbation theory. •Nonperturbative Physics: •Lattice calculations for static situations. •Kinetic Theory: for large times and distances compared to particle energy and momentum. •Hydrodynamics: particles propagate classically between collisions, which are independent, uncorrelated events. Mean free time Perturbation Theory Kinetic Theory Hydrodynamics T 1 ( g 4T ln( g 1 )) 1 ( g 4T ) 1 Quantum Field Theory Soft, nonperturbative dynamics Transport Coefficients (Arnold & Yaffe) Effective Theory   Effective Theories depend on scale separation. Expansion parameter: LowEnergyScale  HighEnergy Scale •Eliminates the high energy scale from the equations of motion, which implies that the high energy scale is not dynamical anymore •Obtain an effective Lagrangian in which the information about the high energy scale is only contained implicitly. Classical Field Approximation   Soft field modes have a large occupation number Classical Field Approximation Hard field modes (p~T) have occupation number unity, so to use classical field approximation Integrate out hard field modes Can think of this as hard field modes propagating in a slowly varying classical background field.     Effective Hard Thermal Loop Theory (HTL) HTL Effective Theory      Infrared divergences due to massless modes in standard thermal theories. Found that physical observables are gauge dependent. Resummation of all 1-loop diagrams with hard internal momenta and soft external momenta (Braaten & Pisarski). HTL corrections to the propagator and vertices lead to gauge invariant results for physical observables. Resulting effective theory for the soft modes contains non-local interactions. NLLO : Next To Leading Logarithmic Order •Dynamics of low frequency gauge fields. D  B   .  color conductivi ty •Effective Leading Logarithmic Order (LLO) obtained by Boedeker after integrating out •Quantum Fluctuations: T •Thermal Fluctuations: gT •Goal: Effective Theory valid beyond LLO •All higher order corrections are suppressed by one or more powers of (ln( g 1 )) 1 (Yaffe) Form of Effective Theory unchanged to NLLO Need only to calculate the single parameter to NLLO.   Langevin Dynamics: Boedeker  Soft field modes affect gauge field dynamics on the magnetic scale  Interactions between higher and lower frequency modes Soft modes (P~ g 2T )  Semihard modes (P~gT) •Goal: Effective Theory for soft modes in QGP  Treat soft modes as the system, semihard modes as the environment •Coarse-grained effective action (coarse-grain parameter are loop expansions) g 2T    gT Classical Effective Theory   Open system introduced through coarse-graining condition. Procedure: (i) Integrate out hard field modes  HTL effective theory (ii)Integrate out degrees of freedom with p~gT.  Resulting Effective Theory D     igA (x) D F   mD W    (v  D)W  v  E   2 BoltzmannLangevin Equation A ( x)  Aa  ( x)T a 1 Tr (T aT b )   ab 2 W ( x, v)  W a ( x, v)T a Fa    a ( x, v)  gf abc (v  at b ( x)wc ( x, v)       Aa   Aa  gf abc A b A c  v   (1, v ) Origin of noise term  To leading logarithmic order equations of motion can be approximated by a Langevin equation. 1 B i   ijk F jk 2 D  B   . White, Gaussian E i  F 0i   ia ( x) jb ( x)  2T ij ab 4 ( x  x) m2 D 1  ( x)  4  0 i ( x) 2 1 Ng T log( g ) i 4 m2 D 1  3 Ng 2T log( g 1 ) Stochastic forcing term Color conductivity Origin of the noise term   Coarse-graining in closed system reduces one of the subsystems to environment (semihard modes) Introduce Open System System Environment (P~ g 2T ) (P~gT) Averaged Effect of environment backreacts on the system. Random Force  due to thermal fluctuations of semihard field modes Dissipative behaviour of the system. i Dissipation of system  Fluctuations in environment Classical Transport Theory    Boltzmann-Langevin equation can be obtained from full QFT as the kinetic limit if the full stochastic Dyson equations (Calzetta/Hu) But, in the semiclassical limit the soft modes have a large occupation number, so can arrive at the Boltzmann-Langevin equation even in classical transport theory.  Classical colored point particles  Phase Space trajectories determined by Lorentzian type equations Litim and Manuel introduce a Boltzmann-Langevin equation including QCD effects p [    abc b c a  gf A Q  gQ F ] f ( x, p, Q)  C[ f ]   ( x, p, Q)   a x  Q a p dp   m  gQ a Fa p d dQ a m   gf abc p  Ab  Q c d non-Abelian: Color charge evolves in time. Classical Transport Theory: Origin of Noise Term     Phenomenological Langevin Approach. Basically stipulating that equation of motion is incomplete. To include the effect of the environment need to include the noise term. Fluctuation-Dissipation Theorem for classical linear dissipative systems (Landau&Lifshitz). Assume: Dissipative process is known: S (i) Central idea: kinetic entropy and thermodynamical forces: Fi   i x j (ii) Near equilibrium, linear response: Fi  ij x (iii) Using fluctuation-dissipation-relation: dxi   ij F   dt j i  The fluctuations near equilibrium can be identified without detailed knowledge of underlying microscopic dynamics responsible for dissipation. Mean Field Fluctuations  Fluctuations at equlibrium, equilibrium distribution function.  f ( x, p, Q)f ( x, p, Q)  f eq ( p) 3 ( x  x) 3 ( p  p) (Q  Q)    f  0 soft and semihard modes can be treated classically due to the large occupation number  Quantum Statistics: Bose-Einstein, Fermi-Dirac  Fluctuation-Dissipation-Relation reduced to classical relation. Nonequilibrium fluctuations f  gf (1)  f  f  gf (1)  f  0  f ( x, p, Q)f ( x, p, Q)  f eq ( p) 3 ( x  x) 3 ( p  p) (Q  Q)  g 2 f (1) ( x, p, Q) f (1) ( x, p, Q)  Fluctuations still present in nonequilibrium Fluctuation-Dissipation-Relation  Dissipative Linear System (Landau&Lifshitz) Dissipation  Fluctuation Key idea: Kinetic entropy S(x), thermodynamic force  i (t ) j (t )  ij (t  t ) Dynamics : dxi   ij F j   i dt dissipative  Random,microscopic fluctuations, induced by environment White, Gaussian Fluctuation-Dissipation  Near equilibrium: Phenomenological linear response Fi  ij x j  Equal time statistics of fluctuations  Einstein’s Law  xi (t ) Fj (t )   i j  Assuming: White, Gaussian noise  ik  [ ik   ki ] Noise-noise Autocorrelation function Symmetrized dissipative function Master Equation  Consider :  Homogeneous gas  Set of velocity states available to N particles divided into K cells  State of the system defined by complete set of occupation numbers K  n(t )  (n1 (t )n2 (t )...nK (t ))    n (t )  N i 1 i Goal: Treat evolution of the system as a stochastic process Assumptions: N n Thermodynamic Limit N  K   K  P(n; t   | m ; t )  P(n; | m ;0)  P(n ; t  | n t ...n t )  P(n t K 11 K 1 K 1 K K stationary | nK 1tK 1 ) Markovian Master Equation  Process entirely determined by   P(m | n; )  P (m | 0)  Transition Probability Master Equation     P(n; )   P(m | n; ) P(m;0) m Assume n changes only be a small amount in t :   t  t      P(n;  t | m) P(n;  t )  P(n; | m; )  t[ |t 0 C ] (t )   Q ( n | m) Transition Matrix Master Equation  C can be calculated using:    P(m | n; t )  1  n     Q(m | m)    Q(m | n )   m n       P(m | n; t )   (m | n )  Q(m | n )t No transition As Transition m->n in t 0 obtain a Master Equation     dP(n; t )   P(m; t )Q(m | n )  dt m   Q ( n | m)  0 Only for i   j  k  l allowed kl ij  0 transitions t  ijkl   klji   ijlk  iikl   ijkk  0  ijkl   klij N-particle stochastic process, position coordinates suppressed   1 Q(m | n )  (  ijkl mi m j ni mi1 n j m j1 nk mk 1 nl ml1  nr mr  ijij mi m j  nr mr ) 4 ij kl ij r ijk r Master Equation  Probability of collision between point particles P(ij  kl)dt  d (ij  kl)mi m j dt d (ij  kl)  ijkl Occupation numbers before collision  ijkl   klji   ijlk  iikl   ijkk  0  ijkl   klij microreversibility Boltzmann Equation  Introduce a characteristic moment generating function (Fourier transform of the probability density) K    ( x; t )   xini P( x; t )  n i 1   ns   | x1...xK 1 xs Summing over all but 1,2…of the occupation numbers equations obtain the BBGKY hierarchy d  ns  1    ijks  ni n j  dt 2 ijk  d  ns  1 1    ijks  ni n j     ksij  nk ns  dt 2 ij  ks 2 k Molecular Chaos assumption: Neglect to  ni  n j  microreversibilty  (ni   ni )( n j   n j )  compared Boltzmann Equation d  ns  1    ijks  ni  n j   nk  ns  dt 2 ij  ks For small deviations from equilibrium:  ni  ni (1  hi ) d  ns  1    ijks ni n j (hi  h j  hk  hs ) dt 2 ij  ks  d  ys  1  dt ns g y   s s ys  ns ns g s   ksj n n j   0 jk 1 1  ijs ni n j   s   ijks ni n j  2 jk 2 jk Langevin idea, Linear response, then a linearized Boltzmann equation with a white, Gaussian noise term is obtained: d  ys  1  dt s g y   s s  c~s (t ) ns N  N ksij s   ijks s  ns N Fokker-Planck Equation A B  2     dP( x; t )  1    [as ( x ) P( x )]   [bs ( x ) P( x )] dt 2 s xs x s xs Drift Term Diffusion Term Comparing terms A and B to the stochastic Boltzmann equation d  ys  1  dt s A g y   s s  c~s (t ) B Then the Fokker-Planck equation is equivalent to the linearized Boltzmann equation with forcing term. Particle Dynamics   Fermions? Quark Dynamics? Consider: Worldline Influence Functional Method (Johnson/Hu)      Quantum/Vacuum fluctuations – Thermal Fluctuations Decoherence – Dissipation Key Concept: Quantum Open System   Langevin Equation for QED Relativistic particles moving in an electromagnetic field. Closed vs. open system System Environment Collection of Worldlines Gauge Field Method = Influence Functional Formalism Summary  Degrees of Freedom and scales in Quark Gluon Plasma Gluons (p~g2T, p~gT)     Semihard field modes backreact on the soft field modes The Boltzmann equation needs to be “upgraded” with a noise term Boltzmann-Langevin (Boedeker) equation Three ways to derive the noise term in kinetic theory:      Quarks (p~T) Boedeker: HTL, coarse-grained effective action, open system Litim/Manuel: Phenomenological Langevin idea, Fluctuation-Dissipation relation Kac/Logan: Master equation, stationary Markovian transition process White, Gaussian noise in all three cases Nonlocal noise? Fermions? Effective Theories ys  ns ns ijkl  0 g s   ksj n n j  jk 1 1  ijs ni n j   s   ijks ni n j  2 jk 2 jk d  ns  1 1    ijks  ni n j     ksij  nk ns  dt 2 ij  ks 2 k     P(n; t   | m; t )  P(n; | m;0)      P(n;  t | m) P(n;  t )  P(n; | m; )  t[ |t 0 C ]   (t )  n (t   )n (t )    n P(m | n; t )  1     Q ( m | m )   Q ( m | n)   ni  ni (1  hi )   m n  d  ys  1  dt ns       P(m | n; t )   (m | n )  Q(m | n )t     dP(n; t )   P(m; t )Q(m | n )  dt m g y   s s t N n K   mn   Q ( n | m)  0 d  ns  1    ijks ni n j (hi  h j  hk  hs ) dt 2 ij  ks P(ij  kl)dt  d (ij  kl)mi m j dt  |x xs 1...xK 1  ni  n j  s  t1 t2 d (ij  kl)  ijkl   n(t )  (n1 (t )n2 (t )...nK (t ))   t  t i   j  k  l  ns   ijkl   klji   ijlk  iikl   ijkk  0  ijkl   klij K  N   P (m | 0)   d  ns  1    ijks  ni  n j   nk  ns  P(nK ; t   | n1t1...nK 1tK 1 )  P(nK tK | nK 1tK 1 ) dt 2 ij  ks K   K   P(m | n; ) d  ys  1  ( x; t )   xini P( x; t )  ni (t )  N ~   g s  ys  cs (t )  n i 1 i 1 dt s      n P(n; )   P(m | n; ) P(m;0)  s  s N m ks   1 kl ij  ij  N ksij Q(m | n )  (  ij mi m j ni mi1 n j m j1 nk mk 1 nl ml1  nr mr  ij mi m j  nr mr )  (ni   ni )( n j   n j )  4 ij  kl r ijk ij      dP( x; t )  1 2   [as ( x ) P( x )]   [bs ( x ) P( x )] dt 2 s xs x s xs r d  ns  1    ijks  ni n j  dt 2 ijk ns N  f  0 f  gf (1)  f  f ( x, p, Q)f ( x, p, Q)  f eq ( p) 3 ( x  x) 3 ( p  p) (Q  Q)  f ( x, p, Q)f ( x, p, Q)  f eq ( p) 3 ( x  x) 3 ( p  p) (Q  Q)  g 2 f (1) ( x, p, Q) f (1) ( x, p, Q) m2 D 1  ( x)  4  0 i ( x) i 2 1 Ng T log( g ) E  F 0i i   ia ( x) jb ( x)  2T ij ab 4 ( x  x) [ D , F  ]  mD m dp    gQ a Fa p d g 2T i S Fi   i x 2 d  f  0 D     igA (x)  4 v W ( x, v) g 2T    gT  A(t ) A(t)  DA (t  t)   (v  D)W  v  E     [v  D,W ( x, v)]  v  E   ( x, v) W ( x, v)  W ( x, v)T a   i i 1 ijk jk  x (t ) Fj (t )   j B   F 2 i a m dQ   gf abc p  Ab  Q c d Fa    v   (1, v )     Aa   Aa  gf abc A b A c D F   mD W  2   4 m D 1 2 3 Ng T log( g 1 ) 2 dxi   ij F j   i dt Fi  ij x j  a ( x, v)  gf abc (v  at b ( x)wc ( x, v)  f  gf (1) a  i (t ) j (t )  ij (t  t )  ik  [ ik   ki ] D  B   . p [ dv  Fext  Fenv dt v  v  Aext  A fluct  A ( x)  Aa  ( x)T a 1 Tr (T aT b )   ab 2 M     gf abc Ab  Q c  gQa F a   ] f ( x, p, Q)  C[ f ]   ( x, p, Q)  a x Q p
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                            ![Problem 1. Domain walls of ϕ theory. [10 pts]](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/008941810_1-60c5d1d637847e1c41f4f005f4c29c0f-150x150.png) 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            