The Hagedorn Temperature as a Nonequilibrium Dynamical Bottleneck in String Thermodynamics
Cesar Damian, Oscar Loaiza-Brito

TL;DR
This paper explores the Hagedorn temperature in string theory from a nonequilibrium perspective using SEAQT, revealing it as a dynamical bottleneck affecting thermodynamic response and system evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a nonequilibrium framework for understanding Hagedorn behavior, deriving a state-dependent temperature evolution and analyzing its role as a dynamical bottleneck.
Findings
Hagedorn regime acts as a dynamical bottleneck controlled by fluctuation moments.
Reservoir coupling can induce Hagedorn slowing-down in open systems.
The bottleneck strength depends on both exponential density of states and algebraic prefactors.
Abstract
The Hagedorn regime of string theory is usually understood as an equilibrium limiting phenomenon: the exponential growth of the density of states makes the canonical partition function singular at the Hagedorn temperature, while in the microcanonical description additional energy is absorbed predominantly by highly excited long-string configurations. In this work we revisit this regime from a nonequilibrium perspective using Steepest-Entropy-Ascent Quantum Thermodynamics (SEAQT), where thermodynamic evolution is formulated directly on the state manifold and does not require a globally well-defined canonical ensemble. The inverse temperature is treated as an instantaneous, state-dependent quantity, and we derive its exact scalar evolution equation. In the commuting limit, this dynamics is controlled by higher-order fluctuation moments, showing that the Hagedorn regime may act as a…
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