We show that, by studying the arrival times of radio pulses from
highly-magnetized pulsars, it may be possible to detect light spin-0 bosons
(such as axions and axion-like particles) with a much greater sensitivity, over
a broad particle mass range than is currently reachable by terrestrial
experiments and indirect astrophysical bounds. In particular, we study the
effect of splitting of photon-boson beams under intense magnetic field
gradients in magnetars and show that radio pulses (at meter wavelengths) may be
split and shift by a discernible phase down to a photon-boson coupling constant
of g ~ 1e-14 [1/GeV]; i.e., about four orders of magnitude lower than current
upper limits on g. The effect increases linearly with photon wavelength with
split pulses having equal fluxes and similar polarizations. These properties
make the identification of beam-splitting and beam deflection effects
straightforward with currently available data. Better understanding of radio
emission from magnetars is, however, required to confidently exclude regions in
the parameter space when such effects are not observed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure