We consider the classical evolution of a lattice of non-linear coupled
oscillators for a special case of initial conditions resembling the equilibrium
state of a macroscopic thermal system at the critical point. The displacements
of the oscillators define initially a fractal measure on the lattice associated
with the scaling properties of the order parameter fluctuations in the
corresponding critical system. Assuming a sudden symmetry breaking (quench),
leading to a change in the equilibrium position of each oscillator, we
investigate in some detail the deformation of the initial fractal geometry as
time evolves. In particular we show that traces of the critical fractal measure
can sustain for large times and we extract the properties of the chain which
determine the associated time-scales. Our analysis applies generally to
critical systems for which, after a slow developing phase where equilibrium
conditions are justified, a rapid evolution, induced by a sudden symmetry
breaking, emerges in time scales much shorter than the corresponding relaxation
or observation time. In particular, it can be used in the fireball evolution in
a heavy-ion collision experiment, where the QCD critical point emerges, or in
the study of evolving fractals of astrophysical and cosmological scales, and
may lead to determination of the initial critical properties of the Universe
through observations in the symmetry broken phase.Comment: 15 pages, 15 figures, version publiced at Physical Review