Constraining Axion-Like Particles with HAWC Observations of TeV Blazars
Axion-like particles (ALPs) are a broad class of pseudo-scalar bosons that generically arise from broken symmetries in extensions of the standard model. In many scenarios, ALPs can mix with photons in regions with high magnetic fields. Photons from distant sources can mix with ALPs, which then trave...
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Zusammenfassung: | Axion-like particles (ALPs) are a broad class of pseudo-scalar bosons that
generically arise from broken symmetries in extensions of the standard model.
In many scenarios, ALPs can mix with photons in regions with high magnetic
fields. Photons from distant sources can mix with ALPs, which then travel
unattenuated through the Universe, before they mix back to photons in the Milky
Way galactic magnetic field. Thus, photons can traverse regions where their
signals would normally be blocked or attenuated. In this paper, we study TeV
$\gamma$-ray observations from distant blazars, utilizing the significant
$\gamma$-ray attenuation expected from such signals to look for excess photon
fluxes that may be due to ALP-photon mixing. We find no such excesses among a
stacked population of seven blazars and constrain the ALP-photon coupling
constant to fall below $\sim$3$\times$10$^{-11}$ GeV$^{-1}$ for ALP masses
below 300 neV. These results are competitive with, or better than, leading
terrestrial and astrophysical constraints in this mass range. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2203.04332 |