30 research outputs found
Vacuum creation of quarks at the time scale of QGP thermalization and strangeness enhancement in heavy-ion collisions
The vacuum parton creation in quickly varying external fields is studied at
the time scale of order 1 fm/ typical for the quark-gluon plasma formation
and thermalization. To describe the pre-equilibrium evolution of the system the
transport kinetic equation is employed. It is shown that the dynamics of
production process at times comparable with particle inverse masses can deviate
considerably from that based on classical Schwinger-like estimates for
homogeneous and constant fields. One of the effects caused by non-stationary
chromoelectric fields is the enhancement of the yield of quark
pairs. Dependence of this effect on the shape and duration of the field pulse
is studied together with the influence of string fusion and reduction of quark
masses.Comment: REVTEX, 11pp. incl. 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Lett.
Closed system of equations for description of the e+e– γ plasma generated from vacuum by strong electric field
We develop a self-consistent kinetic description of a e+e– γ plasma, generated from vacuum in a focal spot of counterpropagating laser pulses. Our model assumes purely time-dependent external (laser) field, but properly takes into account the semiclassical internal (plasma) field, as well as quantum radiation. While nonperturbative kinetic description of e+e–-pair production from vacuum and the simplest variant of backreaction problem have been previously addressed, quantum radiation is included in such a model for the first time. To achieve this goal we derived coupled kinetic equations for the electron, positron, and photon plasma species and the Maxwell equation for the internal electric field. Photon subsystem is included systematically using the BBGKY chain, which we truncate at the second order of perturbation theory by taking into account the annihilation and radiation channels. An important application of our results would be consideration of laser field depletion due to cascade production beyond the locally constant field approximation