McGill.CA / Science / Department of Physics

Seminar in Hadronic Physics

Shear viscosity and resonance lifetimes in the hadron gas

Jean-Bernard Rose

Frankfurt University

We address a discrepancy between different computations of ν/s (shear viscosity over entropy density) of hadronic matter. Substantial deviations of this coefficient are found between transport approaches mainly based on resonance propagation with finite lifetime and other (semi-analytical) approaches with energy-dependent cross-sections, where interactions do not introduce a timescale. We provide an independent extraction of this coefficient by using the newly-developed SMASH (Simulating Many Accelerated Strongly interacting Hadrons) transport code, which is an example of a mainly resonance-based approach. We compare the results from SMASH with numerical solutions of the Boltzmann equation for simple systems using the Chapman-Enskog expansion, as well as previous results in the literature. Our conclusion is that the hadron interaction via resonance formation/decay strongly affects the transport properties of the system, resulting in significant differences in ν/s with respect to other approaches where binary collisions dominate. We argue that the relaxation time of the system - which characterizes the shear viscosity - is determined by the interplay between the mean-free time and the lifetime of resonances. We show how an artificial shortening of the resonancelifetimes, or the addition of a background elastic cross section nicely interpolate between the two discrepant results.

Tuesday, October 10th 2017, 14:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)