6533b883fe1ef96bd12de36d
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Quasiparticle properties of nonequilibrium gluon plasma
Jarkko Peuronsubject
thermalizationnonequilibriumkvarkki-gluoniplasmalattice field theoryquasiparticleplasmon masshiukkasfysiikkahigh energy physicsclassical Yang-Mills theoryplasmonitplasmonquantum chromodynamicsnuclear theorylattice gauge theorykvanttiväridynamiikkakvanttikenttäteoriaclassical field theorydescription
We apply classical gluodynamics to early stages of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions. We start by giving a brief overview of QCD. Then we proceed to the space-time evolution of ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions in the color glass condensate framework and go through the basics of real-time gluodynamics on the lattice in the temporal gauge. We study the plasmon mass scale in three- and two-dimensional systems by comparing three different methods to measure the mass scale. The methods are a formula which can be derived from Hard Thermal Loop effective theory at leading order (HTL), the effective dispersion relation (DR) and measurement of the plasma oscillation frequency triggered by the introduction of a uniform electric field (UE) into the system. We observe that in both systems the plasmon mass scale decreases like a power law after an occupation number dependent initial transient time. In 3 dimensions we observe the power law to be ω2pl ∼ t−2/7, which is predicted by the literature. In 2 dimensions the observed power law is ω2pl ∼ t−1/3. In both cases the UE and HTL methods are in rough agreement, and in the three-dimensional case the two agree in the continuum limit. As a second way to study the quasiparticle properties, we derive, implement and test an algorithm which can be used to simulate linearized fluctuations on top of the classical background. The algorithm is derived by requiring conservation of Gauss’ law and gauge invariance. We then apply the algorithm to spectral properties of overoccupied gluodynamics using linear response theory. We establish the existence of transverse and longitudinal quasiparticles by extracting their spectral functions. We also extract the dispersion relation, effective mass, plasmon mass and damping rate of the quasiparticles. Our results are consistent with the HTL effective theory, but we also observe effects beyond leading order HTL.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-01-01 |