40 research outputs found

    Polarization Signals from Axion-Photon Resonant Conversion in Neutron Star Magnetosphere

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    Neutron stars provide ideal astrophysical laboratories for probing new physics beyond the Standard Model. If axions exist, photons can develop linear polarization during photon-axion conversion in the magnetic field of a neutron star. We find that the plasma in the neutron star magnetosphere could dramatically enhance the polarization through the resonant conversion effect. With the polarization measurements from PSR B0531+21, PSR B0656+14, and 4U 0142+61, we derive new strong constraints on the axion-photon coupling in a broad axion mass range 10βˆ’11≲ma≲10βˆ’310^{-11}\lesssim m_a \lesssim 10^{-3} eV.Comment: 7+5 pages, 2+2 figure

    Dark Matter from Higher Dimensional Primordial Black Holes

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    The evaporation of primordial black holes provides a promising dark matter production mechanism without relying on any non-gravitational interactions between the dark sector and the Standard Model. In theories of ``Large'' Extra Dimensions (LEDs), the true scale of quantum gravity, Mβˆ—M_*, could be well below the Planck scale, thus allowing for energetic particle collisions to produce microscopic black holes in the primordial plasma at temperatures as low as T≳100T \gtrsim 100 GeV. Additionally, LEDs modify the relationship between black hole mass, radius, and temperature, allowing microscopic black holes to grow to macroscopic sizes in the early Universe. In this work we study three scenarios for the production of dark matter via LED black holes: 1) Delayed Evaporating Black Holes (DEBHs) which grow to macroscopic sizes before ultimately evaporating, 2) Instantly Evaporating Black Holes (IEBHs) which immediately evaporate, and 3) stable black hole relics with a mass Mβˆ—M_* known as Planckeons. For a given reheating temperature, TRHT_\mathrm{RH}, we show that DEBHs produce significantly less dark matter than both IEBHs and Planckeons. IEBHs are able to produce the observed relic abundance of dark matter so long as the reheating scale is in the range 10βˆ’2≀TRH/Mβˆ—β‰€10βˆ’110^{-2} \leq T_\mathrm{RH}/M_* \leq 10^{-1}. We calculate the average speed for the resulting dark matter and show that it would be sufficiently cold for all dark matter masses mdm≳10βˆ’4m_{dm} \gtrsim 10^{-4} GeV. This mechanism is viable for any scale of quantum gravity in the range 104 GeV≀Mβˆ—β‰€MPl10^4\,\mathrm{ GeV} \leq M_* \leq M_{Pl} and for any number of LEDs.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure

    Probing neutrino production in high-energy astrophysical neutrino sources with the Glashow Resonance

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    The flavor composition of high-energy neutrinos carries important information about their birth. However, the two most common production scenarios, pppp (hadronuclear) and pΞ³p\gamma (photohadronic) processes, lead to the same flavor ratios when neutrinos and antineutrinos cannot be distinguished. The Glashow resonant interaction Ξ½Λ‰e+eβˆ’β†’Wβˆ’\bar{\nu}_e+e^- \rightarrow W^- becomes a window to differentiate the antineutrino contribution from the total diffuse neutrino flux, thus lifting this degeneracy. We examine the power of Glashow resonant events in measuring the fraction of the Ξ½Λ‰e\bar{\nu}_e flux with current IceCube data, and produce projected sensitivities based on the combined exposure of planned Cherenkov neutrino telescopes around the globe. We find that pppp and pΞ³p\gamma can be distinguished at a 2Οƒ\sigma significance level in the next decades, in both an event-wise analysis and a more conservative statistical analysis, even with pessimistic assumptions on the spectral index of the astrophysical flux. Finally, we consider the sensitivity of future experiments to mixed production mechanisms.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figure
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