1,068 research outputs found
Exact and Truncated Dynamics in Nonequilibrium Field Theory
Nonperturbative dynamics of quantum fields out of equilibrium is often
described by the time evolution of a hierarchy of correlation functions, using
approximation methods such as Hartree, large N, and nPI-effective action
techniques. These truncation schemes can be implemented equally well in a
classical statistical system, where results can be tested by comparison with
the complete nonlinear evolution obtained by numerical methods. For a 1+1
dimensional scalar field we find that the early-time behaviour is reproduced
qualitatively by the Hartree dynamics. The inclusion of direct scattering
improves this to the quantitative level. We show that the emergence of
nonthermal temperature profiles at intermediate times can be understood in
terms of the fixed points of the evolution equations in the Hartree
approximation. The form of the profile depends explicitly on the initial
ensemble. While the truncated evolution equations do not seem to be able to get
away from the fixed point, the full nonlinear evolution shows thermalization
with a (surprisingly) slow relaxation.Comment: 30 pages with 12 eps figures, minor changes; to appear in Phys.Rev.
The approach to thermalization in the classical phi^4 theory in 1+1 dimensions: energy cascades and universal scaling
We study the dynamics of thermalization and the approach to equilibrium in
the classical phi^4 theory in 1+1 spacetime dimensions. At thermal equilibrium
we exploit the equivalence between the classical canonical averages and
transfer matrix quantum traces of the anharmonic oscillator to obtain exact
results for the temperature dependence of several observables, which provide a
set of criteria for thermalization. We find that the Hartree approximation is
remarkably accurate in equilibrium. The non-equilibrium dynamics is studied by
numerically solving the equations of motion in light-cone coordinates for a
broad range of initial conditions and energy densities.The time evolution is
described by several stages with a cascade of energy towards the ultraviolet.
After a transient stage, the spatio-temporal gradient terms become larger than
the nonlinear term and a stage of universal cascade emerges.This cascade starts
at a time scale t_0 independent of the initial conditions (except for very low
energy density). Here the power spectra feature universal scaling behavior and
the front of the cascade k(t) grows as a power law k(t) sim t^alpha with alpha
lesssim 0.25. The wake behind the cascade is described as a state of Local
Thermodynamic Equilibrium (LTE) with all correlations being determined by the
equilibrium functional form with an effective time dependent temperatureTeff(t)
which slowly decreases as sim t^{-alpha}.Two well separated time scales emerge
while Teff(t) varies slowly, the wavectors in the wake with k < k(t) attain LTE
on much shorter time scales.This universal scaling stage ends when the front of
the cascade reaches the cutoff at a time t_1 sim a^{-1/alpha}. Virialization
starts to set much earlier than LTE. We find that strict thermalization is
achieved only for an infinite time scale.Comment: relevance for quantum field theory discussed providing validity
criteria. To appear in Phys. Rev.
Nonlinear dynamics of phase separation in thin films
We present a long-wavelength approximation to the Navier-Stokes Cahn-Hilliard
equations to describe phase separation in thin films. The equations we derive
underscore the coupled behaviour of free-surface variations and phase
separation. We introduce a repulsive substrate-film interaction potential and
analyse the resulting fourth-order equations by constructing a Lyapunov
functional, which, combined with the regularizing repulsive potential, gives
rise to a positive lower bound for the free-surface height. The value of this
lower bound depends on the parameters of the problem, a result which we compare
with numerical simulations. While the theoretical lower bound is an obstacle to
the rupture of a film that initially is everywhere of finite height, it is not
sufficiently sharp to represent accurately the parametric dependence of the
observed dips or `valleys' in free-surface height. We observe these valleys
across zones where the concentration of the binary mixture changes sharply,
indicating the formation of bubbles. Finally, we carry out numerical
simulations without the repulsive interaction, and find that the film ruptures
in finite time, while the gradient of the Cahn--Hilliard concentration develops
a singularity.Comment: 26 pages, 20 figures, PDFLaTeX with RevTeX4 macros. A thorough
analysis of the equations is presented in arXiv:0805.103
Waiting and Residence Times of Brownian Interface Fluctuations
We report on the residence times of capillary waves above a given height
and on the typical waiting time in between such fluctuations. The measurements
were made on phase separated colloid-polymer systems by laser scanning confocal
microscopy. Due to the Brownian character of the process, the stochastics vary
with the chosen measurement interval . In experiments, the discrete
scanning times are a practical cutoff and we are able to measure the waiting
time as a function of this cutoff. The measurement interval dependence of the
observed waiting and residence times turns out to be solely determined by the
time dependent height-height correlation function . We find excellent
agreement with the theory presented here along with the experiments.Comment: 5 figure
Bubbles and Filaments: Stirring a Cahn-Hilliard Fluid
The advective Cahn-Hilliard equation describes the competing processes of
stirring and separation in a two-phase fluid. Intuition suggests that bubbles
will form on a certain scale, and previous studies of Cahn-Hilliard dynamics
seem to suggest the presence of one dominant length scale. However, the
Cahn-Hilliard phase-separation mechanism contains a hyperdiffusion term and we
show that, by stirring the mixture at a sufficiently large amplitude, we excite
the diffusion and overwhelm the segregation to create a homogeneous liquid. At
intermediate amplitudes we see regions of bubbles coexisting with regions of
hyperdiffusive filaments. Thus, the problem possesses two dominant length
scales, associated with the bubbles and filaments. For simplicity, we use use a
chaotic flow that mimics turbulent stirring at large Prandtl number. We compare
our results with the case of variable mobility, in which growth of bubble size
is dominated by interfacial rather than bulk effects, and find qualitatively
similar results.Comment: 20 pages, 27 figures. RevTeX
Dissipation in equations of motion of scalar fields
The methods of non-equilibrium quantum field theory are used to investigate
the possibility of representing dissipation in the equation of motion for the
expectation value of a scalar field by a friction term, such as is commonly
included in phenomenological inflaton equations of motion. A sequence of
approximations is exhibited which reduces the non-equilibrium theory to a set
of local evolution equations. However, the adiabatic solution to these
evolution equations which is needed to obtain a local equation of motion for
the expectation value is not well defined; nor, therefore, is the friction
coefficient. Thus, a non-equilibrium treatment is essential, even for a system
that remains close to thermal equilibrium, and the formalism developed here
provides one means of achieving this numerically.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figure
Particle Production and Effective Thermalization in Inhomogeneous Mean Field Theory
As a toy model for dynamics in nonequilibrium quantum field theory we
consider the abelian Higgs model in 1+1 dimensions with fermions. In the
approximate dynamical equations, inhomogeneous classical (mean) Bose fields are
coupled to quantized fermion fields, which are treated with a mode function
expansion. The effective equations of motion imply e.g. Coulomb scattering, due
to the inhomogeneous gauge field. The equations are solved numerically. We
define time dependent fermion particle numbers with the help of the single-time
Wigner function and study particle production starting from inhomogeneous
initial conditions. The particle numbers are compared with the Fermi-Dirac
distribution parametrized by a time dependent temperature and chemical
potential. We find that the fermions approximately thermalize locally in time.Comment: 16 pages + 6 eps figures, some clarifications and two references
added, typos corrected; to appear in Phys.Rev.
Symmetry Breaking and False Vacuum Decay after Hybrid Inflation
We discuss the onset of symmetry breaking from the false vacuum in generic
scenarios in which the mass squared of the symmetry breaking (Higgs) field
depends linearly with time, as it occurs, via the evolution of the inflaton, in
models of hybrid inflation. We show that the Higgs fluctuations evolve from
quantum to classical during the initial stages. This justifies the subsequent
use of real-time lattice simulations to describe the fully non-perturbative and
non-linear process of symmetry breaking. The early distribution of the Higgs
field is that of a smooth classical gaussian random field, and consists of
lumps whose shape and distribution is well understood analytically. The lumps
grow with time and develop into ``bubbles'' which eventually collide among
themselves, thus populating the high momentum modes, in their way towards
thermalization at the true vacuum. With the help of some approximations we are
able to provide a quasi-analytic understanding of this process.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figures, LaTeX, uses revtex. Version to be published in
Phys. Rev. with minor change
Kinetic pathways of the Nematic-Isotropic phase transition as studied by confocal microscopy on rod-like viruses
We investigate the kinetics of phase separation for a mixture of rodlike
viruses (fd) and polymer (dextran), which effectively constitutes a system of
attractive rods. This dispersion is quenched from a flow-induced fully nematic
state into the region where the nematic and the isotropic phase coexist. We
show experimental evidence that the kinetic pathway depends on the overall
concentration. When the quench is made at high concentrations, the system is
meta-stable and we observe typical nucleation-and-growth. For quenches at low
concentration the system is unstable and the system undergoes a spinodal
decomposition. At intermediate concentrations we see the transition between
both demixing processes, where we locate the spinodal point.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, accepted in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter as
symposium paper for the 6th Liquid Matter Conference in Utrech
The Development of Equilibrium After Preheating
We present a fully nonlinear study of the development of equilibrium after
preheating. Preheating is the exponentially rapid transfer of energy from the
nearly homogeneous inflaton field to fluctuations of other fields and/or the
inflaton itself. This rapid transfer leaves these fields in a highly nonthermal
state with energy concentrated in infrared modes. We have performed lattice
simulations of the evolution of interacting scalar fields during and after
preheating for a variety of inflationary models. We have formulated a set of
generic rules that govern the thermalization process in all of these models.
Notably, we see that once one of the fields is amplified through parametric
resonance or other mechanisms it rapidly excites other coupled fields to
exponentially large occupation numbers. These fields quickly acquire nearly
thermal spectra in the infrared, which gradually propagates into higher
momenta. Prior to the formation of total equilibrium, the excited fields group
into subsets with almost identical characteristics (e.g. group effective
temperature). The way fields form into these groups and the properties of the
groups depend on the couplings between them. We also studied the onset of chaos
after preheating by calculating the Lyapunov exponent of the scalar fields.Comment: 15 pages, 23 figure
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