Abstract

We consider the phase diagram of hadronic matter as a function of temperature, T , and baryon chemical potential, mu. Currently the dominant paradigm is a line of first order transitions which ends at a critical endpoint. In this work we suggest that spatially inhomogenous phases are a generic feature of the hadronic phase diagram at nonzero mu and low T . Familiar examples are pion and kaon condensates. At higher densities, we argue that these condensates connect onto chiral spirals in a quarkyonic regime. Both of these phases exhibit the spontaneous breaking of a global U(1) symmetry and quasi-long range order, analogous to smectic liquid crystals. We argue that there is a continuous line of first order transitions which separate spatially inhomogenous from homogenous phases, where the latter can be either a hadronic phase or a quark-gluon plasma. While mean field theory predicts that there is a Lifshitz point along this line of first order transitions, in three spatial dimensions strong infrared fluctuations wash out any Lifshitz point. Using known results from inhomogenous polymers, we suggest that instead there is a Lifshitz regime. Non-perturbative effects are large in this regime, where the momentum dependent terms for the propagators of pions and associated modes are dominated not by terms quadratic in momenta, but quartic. Fluctuations in a Lifshitz regime may be directly relevant to the collisions of heavy ions at (relatively) low energies, sqrt(s)/A : 1 to 20 GeV.

Highlights

  • The phases of quantum chromodynamics (QCD), as a function of temperature, T, and the baryon chemical potential, μ, are of fundamental interest [1]

  • We show that the phase diagram valid in mean field theory—two lines of second order phase transitions, meeting a line of first order transitions at a Lifshitz point—is dramatically altered by fluctuations

  • We suggest that in QCD, infrared fluctuations wipe out the Lifshitz point, leaving just a line of first order transitions separating the region with inhomogeneous phases from those without

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The phases of quantum chromodynamics (QCD), as a function of temperature, T, and the baryon (or equivalently, quark) chemical potential, μ, are of fundamental interest [1]. At densities between a dense hadronic phase and deconfined quarks, cool quark matter is quarkyonic: while the pressure is (approximately) perturbative, the excitations near the Fermi surface are confined [102]. Our argument applies only to the pressure: excitations about the Fermi surface involve much smaller energies than the chemical potential, so that one expects a transition from the perturbative, to the quarkyonic, regime [102]. This elementary argument may explain why there is a large quarkyonic regime even for two colors [118,119,120,121,122,123] This estimate differs from that at zero quark density and a nonzero temperature, T. The only coherent excitations are the bosonic collective modes, so that the corresponding phase can be characterized as a Bose metal

GINZBURG- LANDAU DESCRIPTION OF QUARKIONIC CRYSTAL PHASE
FLUCTUATIONS AND ORDER
MAGNETIC FIELD
V0 q2fB2: ð27Þ
General effective Lagrangian
Possible phase diagram of QCD
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