Hydrodynamical description of the "Little Bang" in heavy ion collisions is
surprisingly successful, mostly due to the very small viscosity of the
Quark-Gluon plasma. In this paper we systematically study the propagation of
small perturbations, also treated hydrodynamically. We start with a number of
known techniques allowing for analytic calculation of the propagation of small
perturbations on top of the expanding fireball. The simplest approximation is
the "geometric acoustics", which substitutes the wave equation by mechanical
equations for the propagating "phonons". Next we turn to the case in which
variables can be separated, in which case one can obtain not only the eikonal
phases but also amplitudes of the perturbation. Finally, we focus on the so
called Gubser flow, a particular conformal analytic solution for the fireball
expansion, on top of which one can derive closed equations for small
perturbations. Perfect hydrodynamics allows all variables to be separated and
all equations to be solved in terms of known special functions. We can thus
collect the analytical expression for all the harmonics and reconstruct the
complete Green function of the problem. In the viscous case the equations still
allow for variable separation, but one of the equations has to be solved
numerically. We still can collect all the harmonics and show real-time
perturbation evolution, observing viscosity-induced changes in the spectra and
the correlation functions of secondaries. We end up by comparing the calculated
angular shape of the correlation function to the STAR experimental data, and
find, for sufficiently large viscosity, a surprisingly good agreement.Comment: The paper was changed after PRC referee report. It was resubmitted in
this for