Cargando…

Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles

Several unexpected astrophysical observations can be explained by gravitationally captured massive axions or axion-like particles, which are produced inside the Sun or other stars and are accumulated over cosmic times. Their radiative decay in solar outer space would give rise to a `self-irradiation...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: DiLella, L, Zioutas, K
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2002
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0927-6505(02)00186-X
http://cds.cern.ch/record/559121
_version_ 1780899034039320576
author DiLella, L
Zioutas, K
author_facet DiLella, L
Zioutas, K
author_sort DiLella, L
collection CERN
description Several unexpected astrophysical observations can be explained by gravitationally captured massive axions or axion-like particles, which are produced inside the Sun or other stars and are accumulated over cosmic times. Their radiative decay in solar outer space would give rise to a `self-irradiation' of the whole star, providing the time-independent component of the corona heating source (we do not address here the flaring Sun). In analogy with the Sun-irradiated Earth atmosphere, the temperature and density gradient in the corona$-$chromosphere transition region is suggestive for an omnipresent irradiation of the Sun, which is the strongest evidence for the generic axion-like scenario. The same mechanism is compatible with phenomena like the solar wind, the X-rays from the dark-side of the Moon, the X-Ray Background Radiation, the diffuse X-ray excesses (below $\sim 1$ keV), the non-cooling of oldest Stars, etc. A temperature of $\sim 10^6$ K is observed in various places, while the radiative decay of a population of such elusive particles mimics a hot gas, which fits unexpected astrophysical X-ray observations. Furthermore, the recently reconstructed quiet solar X-ray spectrum during solar minimum supports this work, since it covers the expected energy range, and it is consistent with the result of a simulation based on Kaluza-Klein axions above $\sim$ 1 keV. The derived axion luminosity ($L_a\approx 0.16L_{\odot}$) fits the cosmic energy density spectrum and is compatible within 2$\sigma $ with the recent SNO result, showing the important interplay between any exotic energy loss mechanism and neutrino production. At lower energies, using also a ROSAT observation, only $\sim 3\%$ of the X-ray intensity is explained. Data from orbiting X-ray Telescopes provide upper limits for particle decay rates 1 AU from the Sun, and suggest new types of searches on Earth or in space. In particular, X-ray observatories, with an unrivalled equivalent fiducial volume of $\sim 10^3~m^3$ for the 0.1 - 10 keV range, can search for the radiative decay of new particles even from existing data. This work introduces the elongation angle of the X-ray Telescope relative to the Sun as a relevant new parameter.
id cern-559121
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2002
record_format invenio
spelling cern-5591212021-07-29T02:44:55Zdoi:10.1016/S0927-6505(02)00186-Xhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/559121engDiLella, LZioutas, KObservational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particlesAstrophysics and AstronomySeveral unexpected astrophysical observations can be explained by gravitationally captured massive axions or axion-like particles, which are produced inside the Sun or other stars and are accumulated over cosmic times. Their radiative decay in solar outer space would give rise to a `self-irradiation' of the whole star, providing the time-independent component of the corona heating source (we do not address here the flaring Sun). In analogy with the Sun-irradiated Earth atmosphere, the temperature and density gradient in the corona$-$chromosphere transition region is suggestive for an omnipresent irradiation of the Sun, which is the strongest evidence for the generic axion-like scenario. The same mechanism is compatible with phenomena like the solar wind, the X-rays from the dark-side of the Moon, the X-Ray Background Radiation, the diffuse X-ray excesses (below $\sim 1$ keV), the non-cooling of oldest Stars, etc. A temperature of $\sim 10^6$ K is observed in various places, while the radiative decay of a population of such elusive particles mimics a hot gas, which fits unexpected astrophysical X-ray observations. Furthermore, the recently reconstructed quiet solar X-ray spectrum during solar minimum supports this work, since it covers the expected energy range, and it is consistent with the result of a simulation based on Kaluza-Klein axions above $\sim$ 1 keV. The derived axion luminosity ($L_a\approx 0.16L_{\odot}$) fits the cosmic energy density spectrum and is compatible within 2$\sigma $ with the recent SNO result, showing the important interplay between any exotic energy loss mechanism and neutrino production. At lower energies, using also a ROSAT observation, only $\sim 3\%$ of the X-ray intensity is explained. Data from orbiting X-ray Telescopes provide upper limits for particle decay rates 1 AU from the Sun, and suggest new types of searches on Earth or in space. In particular, X-ray observatories, with an unrivalled equivalent fiducial volume of $\sim 10^3~m^3$ for the 0.1 - 10 keV range, can search for the radiative decay of new particles even from existing data. This work introduces the elongation angle of the X-ray Telescope relative to the Sun as a relevant new parameter.Unexpected astrophysical observations can be explained by gravitationally captured massive particles, which are produced inside the Sun or other Stars and are accumulated over cosmic times. Their radiative decay in solar outer space would give rise to a `self-irradiation' of the whole star, providing the time-independent component of the corona heating source. In analogy with the Sun-irradiated Earth atmosphere, the temperature and density gradient in the corona - chromosphere transition region is suggestive for an omnipresent irradiation of the Sun. The same scenario fits other astrophysical X-ray observations. The radiative decay of a population of such elusive particles mimics a hot gas. X-ray observatories, with an unrivalled sensitivity below ~10 keV, can search for such particles. The elongation angle relative to the Sun is the relevant new parameter.astro-ph/0207073CERN-EP-2002-038CERN-EP-2002-038oai:cds.cern.ch:5591212002-02-22
spellingShingle Astrophysics and Astronomy
DiLella, L
Zioutas, K
Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
title Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
title_full Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
title_fullStr Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
title_full_unstemmed Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
title_short Observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
title_sort observational evidence for gravitationally trapped massive axion(-like) particles
topic Astrophysics and Astronomy
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0927-6505(02)00186-X
http://cds.cern.ch/record/559121
work_keys_str_mv AT dilellal observationalevidenceforgravitationallytrappedmassiveaxionlikeparticles
AT zioutask observationalevidenceforgravitationallytrappedmassiveaxionlikeparticles