19–21 May 2025
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Bubble wall velocity from Kadanoff-Baym equations: fluid dynamics and microscopic interactions

20 May 2025, 15:30
15m
David Lawrence Hall 205, University of Pittsburgh

David Lawrence Hall 205, University of Pittsburgh

New Developments in Theory New Developments in Theory

Speaker

Jiang Zhu (University of Massachusetts-Amherst)

Description

We establish a first principles, systematic framework for determining the bubble wall velocity during a first order cosmological phase transition. This framework, based on non-local Kadanoff-Baym equations, incorporates both macroscopic fluid dynamics and microscopic interactions between the bubble wall and particles in the plasma. Previous studies have generally focused on one of these two sources of friction pressure that govern the wall velocity. As a precursor, we utilize background field quantum field theory to obtain the relevant local Boltzmann equations, from which we derive the forces associated with variation of particle masses across the bubble wall and the microscopic wall-particle interactions. We subsequently show how these equations emerge from the Kadanoff-Baym framework under various approximations. We apply this framework in the ballistic regime to compute the new friction force arising from the $2\rightarrow 2$ scattering processes in scalar field theory. We obtain a linear relationship between this force and the Lorentz factor $\gamma_w$ that would preclude runaway bubbles with such effects.

Author

Jiang Zhu (University of Massachusetts-Amherst)

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