Hydrodynamic behavior is a general feature of interacting systems with many
degrees of freedom constrained by conservation laws. To date hydrodynamic
scaling in relativistic quantum systems has been observed in many high energy
settings, from cosmic ray detections to accelerators, with large particle
multiplicity final states. Here we show first evidence for the emergence of
hydrodynamic scaling in the dynamics of a relativistic quantum field theory. We
consider a simple scalar λϕ4 model in 1+1 dimensions in the
Hartree approximation and study the dynamics of two colliding kinks at
relativistic speeds as well as the decay of a localized high energy density
region. The evolution of the energy-momentum tensor determines the dynamical
local equation of state and allows the measurement of the speed of sound.
Hydrodynamic scaling emerges at high local energy densities.Comment: 4 pages, 4 color eps figures, uses RevTex, v2 some typos corrected
and references adde