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Detecting Axion Stars with Radio Telescopes

Published 29 Sep 2017 in astro-ph.HE and hep-ph | (1709.10516v1)

Abstract: When axion stars fly through an astrophysical magnetic background, the axion-to-photon conversion may generate a large electromagnetic radiation power. After including the interference effects of the spacially-extended axion-star source and the macroscopic medium effects, we estimate the radiation power when an axion star meets a neutron star. For a dense axion star with $10{-13}\,M_\odot$, the radiated power is at the order of $10{11}\,\mbox{W}\times(100\,\mu\mbox{eV}/m_a)4\,(B/10{10}\,\mbox{Gauss})2$ with $m_a$ as the axion particle mass and $B$ the strength of the neutron star magnetic field. For axion stars occupy a large fraction of dark matter energy density, this encounter event with a transient $\mathcal{O}(0.1\,\mbox{s})$ radio signal may happen in our galaxy with the averaged source distance of one kiloparsec. The predicted spectral flux density is at the order of $\mu$Jy for a neutron star with $B\sim 10{13}$ Gauss. The existing Arecibo, GBT, JVLA and FAST and the ongoing SKA radio telescopes have excellent discovery potential of dense axion stars.

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