Abstract

In this proceedings contribution I review recent work in kinetic theory which demonstrates that, for system undergoing Bjorken expansion, there exists an attractor in all moments of the one-particle distribution function. I discuss how this attractor emerges in both exact solutions obtained in relaxation time approximation (RTA) and the effective kinetic theory approach to high-temperature quantum chromodynamics (QCD). The QCD effective kinetic theory collisional kernel used includes both elastic (2 ↔ 2) and LPM-resummed inelastic (2 ↔ 1) contributions. The results obtained indicate that a pseudothermal attractor exists in both RTA and QCD kinetic theory and that their respective attractors can be extended to early times when the system is far from equilibrium. Finally, I discuss how knowledge of the QCD effective kinetic theory attractor can be used to assess different hydrodynamic freeze-out prescriptions used in heavy-ion phenomenology. The results obtained show that improved freeze-out prescriptions such as anisotropic hydrodynamics perform better in conditions corresponding to those generated in high-multiplicity pA and pp collisions, e.g. short lifetime and high inverse Reynolds number.

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