Abstract

Strong magnetic fields impact quantum-chromodynamics (QCD) properties in several situations; examples include the early universe, magnetars, and heavy-ion collisions. These examples share a common trait—time evolution. A prominent QCD property impacted by a strong magnetic field is the quark condensate, an approximate order parameter of the QCD transition between a high-temperature quark-gluon phase and a low-temperature hadronic phase. We use the linear sigma model with quarks to address the quark condensate time evolution under a strong magnetic field. We use the closed time path formalism of nonequilibrium quantum field theory to integrate out the quarks and obtain a mean-field Langevin equation for the condensate. The Langevin equation features dissipation and noise kernels controlled by a damping coefficient. We compute the damping coefficient for magnetic field and temperature values achieved in peripheral relativistic heavy-ion collisions and solve the Langevin equation for a temperature quench scenario. The magnetic field changes the dissipation and noise pattern by increasing the damping coefficient compared to the zero-field case. An increased damping coefficient increases fluctuations and time scales controlling condensate’s short-time evolution, a feature that can impact hadron formation at the QCD transition. The formalism developed here can be extended to include other order parameters, hydrodynamic modes, and system’s expansion to address magnetic field effects in complex settings as heavy-ion collisions, the early universe, and magnetars.

Highlights

  • Strong magnetic fields impact prominent quantum-chromodynamics (QCD) phenomena, notably those associated with QCD’s approximate chiral symmetry in the light-quark sector

  • We summarize the main steps in the derivation of the Langevin equation for the σ mean field from an effective action using the closed time path (CTP) formalism [40,41]

  • We studied the impact of a strong magnetic field on the chiral quark condensate dynamics

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Summary

Introduction

Strong magnetic fields impact prominent quantum-chromodynamics (QCD) phenomena, notably those associated with QCD’s approximate chiral symmetry in the light-quark sector. We direct the reader to References [56,57,58,59] for reviews with additional references on works employing the LSMq and other models This first study aims primarily to get insight into how a strong magnetic field affects condensate dynamics. In. Section 3 we define the effective action and use the closed time path formalism to derive an equation of motion for the condensate, a Langevin equation featuring dissipation and noise kernels. The latter require the magnetized thermal quark propagator in the real time formalism.

The Model
The Effective Action and Langevin Equation
The Thermomagnetic Quark Propagator
Findings
Conclusions and Perspectives
Full Text
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