Is the finite temperature effective potential, effective for dynamics?
Nathan Herring, Shuyang Cao, Daniel Boyanovsky

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the use of the finite temperature effective potential for scalar condensate dynamics, revealing significant limitations and proposing a unitary evolution approach for consistent, non-thermal dynamical analysis.
Contribution
It identifies key caveats of the effective potential in dynamical settings and introduces a unitary time evolution framework for accurate, thermodynamically consistent condensate dynamics.
Findings
Finite temperature effective potential has limited validity for dynamical condensates.
Dynamical evolution leads to non-monotonic entropy and non-thermal particle distributions.
A unitary evolution approach provides a consistent framework for studying condensate dynamics.
Abstract
We study the applicability of the finite temperature effective potential in the equation of motion of a homogeneous "misaligned" scalar condensate , and find important caveats that severely restrict its domain of validity: i:) the assumption of local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) is in general not warranted, ii:) we show a direct relation between the effective potential and the thermodynamic entropy density , which entails that for a dynamical the entropy becomes a non-monotonic function of time, iii:) parametric instabilities in both cases with and without spontaneous symmetry breaking lead to profuse particle production with non-thermal distribution functions, iv:) in the case of spontaneous symmetry breaking spinodal instabilities yield a complex effective potential, internal energy and entropy, an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Thermodynamics and Statistical Mechanics
