Carroll hydrodynamics with spin is a theoretical framework describing fluid flow in the ultrarelativistic (c→0) limit with persistent spin degrees of freedom.
It utilizes the pre-ultralocal parametrization to transition from Lorentzian to Carrollian geometry, introducing degenerate spatial metrics and nontrivial spin dynamics.
The framework maps to boost-invariant flows like Bjorken and Gubser flows, offering analytic insights into spin polarization in quark–gluon plasma.
Carroll hydrodynamics with spin is a framework describing fluid dynamics in the Carrollian regime—the ultrarelativistic limit where the speed of light c approaches zero—with explicit inclusion of a spin current. This approach emerges as the c→0 limit of relativistic spin hydrodynamics, yielding a degenerate geometric and dynamical structure in which spatial motion is frozen yet spin degrees of freedom persist and evolve nontrivially. Recent developments (Shukla et al., 21 Jan 2026) provide a covariant formalism for constructing Carroll hydrodynamics with spin, clarify its geometric foundations via the pre-ultralocal (PUL) split, and demonstrate its mapping to boost-invariant flows relevant for quark–gluon plasma phenomenology.
1. Pre-Ultralocal Parametrization of Carrollian Geometry
The pre-ultralocal (PUL) parametrization is a manifestly covariant scheme for taking the c→0 Carrollian limit of Lorentzian geometry. The spacetime vielbein EμA is decomposed into a timelike component scaled by c and spatial components: EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),
with tangent-space indices A=(0,a). The metric and its inverse become
gμν=−c2LμLν+Hμν,gμν=−c21KμKν+Hμν.
The spatial projector is Hμν=EμaEνbδab and Hμν=EμaEνbδab. Orthogonality and completeness conditions enforce
c→00
The Carrollian limit c→01 yields:
A degenerate spatial metric c→02 of signature c→03,
Kernel generator c→04 with c→05,
A clock form c→06 satisfying c→07.
Local Lorentz boosts reduce to local Carroll boosts: c→08
with c→09. Carroll-invariant constructs must be built from c→00, c→01, and their derivatives.
2. Relativistic Spin Hydrodynamics and Carroll Expansion
Relativistic ideal spin hydrodynamics prescribes conservation of stress tensor and spin current: c→02
with constitutive relations
c→03
where c→04 projects orthogonal to the four-velocity c→05 (c→06), and c→07 is the antisymmetric spin-polarization tensor.
The “electric/magnetic” (EM) split is
c→08
with c→09.
Expanding in PUL variables and powers of EμA0, the fluid velocity is
EμA1
with EμA2 as EμA3, subject to
EμA4
This leaves three Carrollian velocity components. Thermodynamic quantities and spin-tensors expand regularly: EμA5
EμA6
The Carrollian spin density is a spatial tensor
EμA7
The energy-momentum tensor and spin current decompose as
EμA8
with leading term
EμA9
In the Carrollian limit,
c0
For the spin current: c1
yielding the Carroll spin density
c2
where c3 and c4 are spatial vectors and c5 is the Carrollian vierbein measure.
3. Carrollian Equations of Motion with Spin and Constitutive Extension
The equations of motion project the energy-momentum conservation along c6 and c7: c8
c9
with Carroll-compatible connection EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),0 (EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),1, EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),2), Carroll extrinsic curvature EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),3, and acceleration EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),4.
The spin-current dynamics in the Carroll limit is: EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),5
or equivalently, for the ideal Carroll spin current EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),6,
EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),7
Spin non-conservation is sourced by torsion in the Carroll connection,
EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),8
in contrast to the torsion-free Levi–Civita connection.
For a conformal parent theory (EμA=(cLμ,Eμa),EμA=(−c1Kμ,Eμa),9, A=(0,a)0), in the Carroll limit the equation of state becomes A=(0,a)1, with the spin-trace constraint: A=(0,a)2
At first order in derivatives, Carroll-invariant terms may be constructed from A=(0,a)3, A=(0,a)4, A=(0,a)5, A=(0,a)6, A=(0,a)7, A=(0,a)8, A=(0,a)9, and their Carroll-covariant derivatives, weighted by transport coefficients. Notably:
4. Mapping Carrollian Hydrodynamics with Spin to Boost-Invariant Flows
Boost-invariant hydrodynamic flows for ultrarelativistic fluids—Bjorken and Gubser flows—are realized as special solutions of Carroll hydrodynamics in suitable Carrollian geometries, now extended to include spin.
Bjorken Flow with Spin
In Milne coordinates gμν=−c2LμLν+Hμν,gμν=−c21KμKν+Hμν.6, the metric is gμν=−c2LμLν+Hμν,gμν=−c21KμKν+Hμν.7. Symmetries impose gμν=−c2LμLν+Hμν,gμν=−c21KμKν+Hμν.8, so in PUL variables,
gμν=−c2LμLν+Hμν,gμν=−c21KμKν+Hμν.9
The Carroll fluid equations reduce to
Hμν=EμaEνbδab0
which matches the Bjorken energy loss law.
For spin, the only compatible longitudinal unit vector is Hμν=EμaEνbδab1 and similarly for Hμν=EμaEνbδab2, with scalar functions Hμν=EμaEνbδab3, Hμν=EμaEνbδab4: Hμν=EμaEνbδab5
and the Carroll spin equation
Hμν=EμaEνbδab6
has solutions Hμν=EμaEνbδab7, Hμν=EμaEνbδab8.
Gubser Flow with Spin
Coordinates Hμν=EμaEνbδab9 on global Hμν=EμaEνbδab0 enable Hμν=EμaEνbδab1 invariance and boosts in Hμν=EμaEνbδab2: Hμν=EμaEνbδab3
with Hμν=EμaEνbδab4 and Carroll data
Hμν=EμaEνbδab5
The equations become
Hμν=EμaEνbδab6
with solution Hμν=EμaEνbδab7. For the spin current, the relevant unit vector is Hμν=EμaEνbδab8, and the Carroll spin equation prescribes Hμν=EμaEνbδab9: c→000
yielding c→001, c→002.
5. Distinctive Properties and Phenomenological Implications
Several novel features arise in Carroll hydrodynamics with spin:
Intrinsic torsion and spin non-conservation: The compatible Carroll connection possesses torsion proportional to c→003, directly sourcing spin non-conservation terms. This sharply contrasts with the symmetric Levi–Civita connection of relativistic hydrodynamics.
Two classes of Carroll fluids: The generating-functional approach (Armas–Jain–Jensen) shows that inclusion of spin and Carroll Goldstone modes yields two inequivalent Carroll fluids: standard c→004 limit and a distinct class with c→005. Coupling of spin in the latter remains an open question.
Ultralocality and fracton analogies: The c→006 collapse of lightcones enforces ultralocality—suppression of spatial dynamics. However, nontrivial extrinsic curvature c→007 and Carroll acceleration c→008 encode geometric memory, giving the spin sector features reminiscent of fractons: internal angular momentum evolution without net transport.
Applications to polarized quark–gluon plasma (QGP): The Carroll mapping for Bjorken and Gubser flows with spin yields analytic templates for early-time spin polarization, relevant for off-central heavy-ion collisions. The characteristic c→009 (Bjorken) and c→010 (Gubser) decay laws for spin polarization provide benchmarks for simulations incorporating additional effects such as shear and vorticity.
In summary, Carroll hydrodynamics with spin is obtained by systematically expanding relativistic spin hydrodynamics in the c→011 regime, utilizing the PUL split, and projecting conservation laws onto Carrollian data c→012. The incorporation of spin enriches both the mathematical structure (via torsion-induced non-conservation) and phenomenological potential (notably in QGP and Carrollian condensed-matter analogs) (Shukla et al., 21 Jan 2026).