The effect of causality constraints on Bayesian analyses of heavy-ion collisions
There have long been questions about the limits to the validity of relativistic fluid dynamics, and whether it is being used outside its regime of validity in modern simulations of relativistic heavy-ion collisions. An important new tool for answering this question is a causality analysis in the non...
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Zusammenfassung: | There have long been questions about the limits to the validity of
relativistic fluid dynamics, and whether it is being used outside its regime of
validity in modern simulations of relativistic heavy-ion collisions. An
important new tool for answering this question is a causality analysis in the
nonlinear regime -- if the solutions of the evolution equations do not respect
relativistic causality, they are not a faithful representation of the
underlying relativistic theory (in this case, quantum chromodynamics). Using
this non-linear criterion, it has recently been shown that hydrodynamics is
indeed being used outside its regime of validity in simulations, at least
sometimes. Here we explore the phenomenological implications, particularly the
quantitative effects of demanding limits on acausality in modern Bayesian
parameter estimation. We find that, while typically only a small fraction of
the system's energy is initially in an acausal regime, placing strict limits on
the allowed energy fraction significantly changes the preferred properties of
the initial condition, which in turn alters the extracted medium properties
such as bulk viscosity, where large values are no longer favored. These
findings highlight the importance of developing better theoretical descriptions
of the early-time, out-of-equilibrium dynamics of relativistic heavy-ion
collisions. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.17127 |