110 research outputs found
Cornering the axion-like particle explanation of quasar polarisations
In a series of paper, it has been shown that the distribution of polarisation
position angles for visible light from quasars is not random in extremely large
regions of the sky. As explained in a recent article, the measurement of
vanishing circular polarisation for such quasars is an important problem for a
mechanism involving the mixing with axion-like particles in external magnetic
fields. In this note, we stress that a recent report of similar coherent
orientations of polarisation in radiowaves further disfavours the need for such
particles, as an effect at these wavelengths would be extremely suppressed or
would directly contradict data.Comment: 5 pages; no figures; accepted for publication as a Brief Report in
Physical Review
On the circular polarisation of light from axion-photon mixing
From the analysis of measurements of the linear polarisation of visible light
coming from quasars, the existence of large-scale coherent orientations of
quasar polarisation vectors in some regions of the sky has been reported. Here,
we show that this can be explained by the mixing of the incoming photons with
nearly massless pseudoscalar (axion-like) particles in extragalactic magnetic
fields. We present a new treatment in terms of wave packets and discuss its
implications for the circular polarisation.Comment: Contributed to "Invisible Universe International Conference", Paris,
June 29 - July 3 2009. To be published in AIP proceeding
Large-scale coherent orientations of quasar polarisation vectors: interpretation in terms of axion-like particles
The observation of redshift-dependent coherent orientations of quasar
polarisation vectors over cosmological distances in some regions of the sky is
reviewed. Based on a good-quality sample of 355 measured quasars, this
observation seems to infer the existence of a new effect acting on light
propagation on such huge distances. A solution in terms of nearly massless
axion-like particles has been proposed in the literature and its current status
is discussed.Comment: Replaced because of a previously badly displayed caption. Contributed
to "Axions 2010", Gainesville (FL), January 15-17 2010. To be published in
AIP conference series. 6 page
New constraints on very light pseudoscalars
Nearly massless axion-like particles are of interest for astrophysical
observations, and some constraints on their parameter space do exist in the
literature. Here, we propose to put new constraints on these particles using
polarisation and, in particular, the polarisation differences observed between
different quasar classes.Comment: Contributed to the "7th Patras Workshop on Axions, WIMPs and WISPs",
Mykonos June 26 - July 1 201
Can axionlike particles explain the alignments of the polarizations of light from quasars?
peer reviewedThe standard axion-like particle explanation of the observed large-scale coherent orientations of quasar polarisation vectors is ruled out by the recent measurements of vanishing of circular polarisation.
We introduce a more general wave-packet formalism and show that, although decoherence effects between waves of different frequencies can reduce significantly the amount of circular polarisation, the axion-like particle hypothesis is disfavoured given the bandwidth with which part of the observations were performed.
Finally, we show that a more sophisticated model of extragalactic fields does not lead to an alignment of polarisations
Axions and polarisation of quasars
We present results showing that, thanks to axion-photon mixing in external
magnetic fields, it is actually possible to produce an effect similar to the
one needed to explain the large-scale coherent orientations of quasar
polarisation vectors in visible light that have been observed in some regions
of the sky.Comment: Contributed to "Three days of Strong Interactions & Astrophysics,
Heidelberg-Liege-Paris-Wroclaw", 6/3/2008-8/3/2008, Spa, Belgium. To be
published in AIP proceeding
Revisiting the SN1987A gamma-ray limit on ultralight axion-like particles
We revise the bound from the supernova SN1987A on the coupling of ultralight
axion-like particles (ALPs) to photons. In a core-collapse supernova, ALPs
would be emitted via the Primakoff process, and eventually convert into gamma
rays in the magnetic field of the Milky Way. The lack of a gamma-ray signal in
the GRS instrument of the SMM satellite in coincidence with the observation of
the neutrinos emitted from SN1987A therefore provides a strong bound on their
coupling to photons. Due to the large uncertainty associated with the current
bound, we revise this argument, based on state-of-the-art physical inputs both
for the supernova models and for the Milky-Way magnetic field. Furthermore, we
provide major amendments, such as the consistent treatment of
nucleon-degeneracy effects and of the reduction of the nuclear masses in the
hot and dense nuclear medium of the supernova. With these improvements, we
obtain a new upper limit on the photon-ALP coupling: g_{a\gamma} < 5.3 x
10^{-12} GeV^{-1}, for m_a < 4.4 x 10^{-10} eV, and we also give its dependence
at larger ALP masses. Moreover, we discuss how much the Fermi-LAT satellite
experiment could improve this bound, should a close-enough supernova explode in
the near future.Comment: Accepted for publication in JCAP (December 22nd, 2014
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