Slowing Out of Equilibrium Near the QCD Critical Point
Boris Berdnikov (MIT), Krishna Rajagopal (MIT)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how critical slowing down limits the growth of correlation length near the QCD critical point in heavy ion collisions, affecting experimental signatures of the phase transition.
Contribution
It provides a quantitative estimate of the impact of nonequilibrium dynamics on correlation length growth near the QCD critical point.
Findings
Critical slowing down significantly reduces correlation length growth.
Nonequilibrium effects must be included for accurate experimental predictions.
Estimated maximum correlation length achievable in heavy ion collisions.
Abstract
The QCD phase diagram may feature a critical end point at a temperature T and baryon chemical potential which is accessible in heavy ion collisions. The universal long wavelength fluctuations which develop near this Ising critical point result in experimental signatures which can be used to find the critical point. The magnitude of the observed effects depends on how large the correlation length becomes. Because the matter created in a heavy ion collision cools through the critical region of the phase diagram in a finite time, critical slowing down limits the growth of , preventing it from staying in equilibrium. This is the fundamental nonequilibrium effect which must be calculated in order to make quantitative predictions for experiment. We use universal nonequilibrium dynamics and phenomenologically motivated values for the necessary nonuniversal quantities to…
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