Physics Letters B | 2021

Photon-axion mixing in thermal emission of isolated neutron stars

 
 
 

Abstract


Thermally emitting neutron stars represent a promising environment for probing the properties of axion-like particles. Due to the strong magnetic fields of these sources, surface photons may partially convert into such particles in the large magnetospheric region surrounding the stars, which will result in distinctive signatures in their spectra. However, the interaction depends on the polarization state of the radiation and is rather weak due to the low experimentally allowed values of the coupling constant gγa. In this work, we compute the degree of photon-axion transition in the case of 100% O-mode polarization and spectral energy distribution of an isotropic blackbody with uniform surface temperature. The stellar magnetic field is assumed to be dipolar. We show that with the maximum effect reached for the magnetic fields ∼ 10 – 10 G (typical for X-ray dim isolated neutron stars) and gγa = 2× 10 −11 GeV, the optical flux is reduced by 30 – 40%, while the high-energy part of the spectrum is not affected. The low-energy decrease exceeds 5% at gγa ≥ 2 × 10 −12 GeV and ma ≤ 2 × 10 −6 eV, which is below the present experimental and astrophysical limits on axion parameters. To obtain the actual observational constraints, rigorous treatment of the radiative surface layers is required.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.physletb.2021.136615
Language English
Journal Physics Letters B

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