Popis: |
It is demonstrated how a many-body system far from thermal equilibrium can exhibit universal dynamics in passing a nonthermal fixed point. As an example, the process of Bose–Einstein (BE) condensation of a dilute cold gas is considered. If the particle flux into the low-energy modes, induced, for example by a cooling quench, is sufficiently strong, the Bose gas develops a characteristic power-law single-particle spectrum $n(k)\sim {{k}^{-5}}$ , and critical slowing down in time occurs. The fixed point is shown to be marked by the creation and dilution of tangled vortex lines. Alternatively, for a weak cooling quench and particle flux, the condensation process runs quasi-adiabatically, passing by the fixed point in the far distance, and the signatures of critical scaling remain absent. |