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Wikipedia

Axion

An axion (/ˈæksiɒn/) is a hypothetical elementary particle originally postulated by the Peccei–Quinn theory in 1977 to resolve the strong CP problem in quantum chromodynamics (QCD). If axions exist and have low mass within a specific range, they are of interest as a possible component of cold dark matter.

Axion
InteractionsGravitational, electromagnetic, strong nuclear, weak nuclear
StatusHypothetical
SymbolA0, a, θ
Theorized1977, Peccei and Quinn
Mass 10−5 to 1 eV/c2 [1]
Electric charge0
Spin0

History edit

Strong CP problem edit

As shown by Gerard 't Hooft,[2] strong interactions of the standard model, QCD, possess a non-trivial vacuum structure[a] that in principle permits violation of the combined symmetries of charge conjugation and parity, collectively known as CP. Together with effects generated by weak interactions, the effective periodic strong CP-violating term, Θ, appears as a Standard Model input – its value is not predicted by the theory, but must be measured. However, large CP-violating interactions originating from QCD would induce a large electric dipole moment (EDM) for the neutron. Experimental constraints on the currently unobserved EDM implies CP violation from QCD must be extremely tiny and thus Θ must itself be extremely small. Since Θ could have any value between 0 and 2π, this presents a "naturalness" problem for the standard model. Why should this parameter find itself so close to zero? (Or, why should QCD find itself CP-preserving?) This question constitutes what is known as the strong CP problem.[b]

Prediction edit

In 1977, Roberto Peccei and Helen Quinn postulated a more elegant solution to the strong CP problem, the Peccei–Quinn mechanism. The idea is to effectively promote Θ to a field. This is accomplished by adding a new global symmetry (called a Peccei–Quinn (PQ) symmetry) that becomes spontaneously broken. This results in a new particle, as shown independently by Frank Wilczek[5] and Steven Weinberg,[6] that fills the role of Θ, naturally relaxing the CP-violation parameter to zero. Wilczek named this new hypothesized particle the "axion" after a brand of laundry detergent because it "cleaned up" a problem,[7][8] while Weinberg called it "the higglet." Weinberg later agreed to adopt Wilczek's name for the particle.[8] Because it has a non-zero mass, the axion is a pseudo-Nambu–Goldstone boson.[9]

Axion dark matter edit

QCD effects produce an effective periodic potential in which the axion field moves. The oscillations of the axion field about the minimum of the effective potential, the so-called misalignment mechanism, generate a cosmological population of cold axions with an abundance depending on the mass of the axion.[10][11][12] With a mass above 5 µeV/c² (10−11 times the electron mass) axions could account for dark matter, and thus be both a dark-matter candidate and a solution to the strong CP problem. If inflation occurs at a low scale and lasts sufficiently long, the axion mass can be as low as 1 peV/c².[13][14][15]

There are two distinct scenarios in which the axion field begins its evolution, depending on the following two conditions:

(a)   The PQ symmetry is spontaneously broken during inflation. This condition is realized whenever the axion energy scale is larger than the Hubble rate at the end of inflation
(b)   The PQ symmetry is never restored after its spontaneous breaking occurs. This condition is realized whenever the axion energy scale is larger than the maximum temperature reached in the post-inflationary Universe.

Broadly speaking, one of the two possible scenarios outlined in the two following subsections occurs:

Pre-inflationary scenario edit

If both (a) and (b) are satisfied, cosmic inflation selects one patch of the Universe within which the spontaneous breaking of the PQ symmetry leads to a homogeneous value of the initial value of the axion field. In this "pre-inflationary" scenario, topological defects are inflated away and do not contribute to the axion energy density. However, other bounds that come from isocurvature modes severely constrain this scenario, which require a relatively low-energy scale of inflation to be viable.[16][17][18]

Post-inflationary scenario edit

If at least one of the conditions (a) or (b) is violated, the axion field takes different values within patches that are initially out of causal contact, but that today populate the volume enclosed by our Hubble horizon. In this scenario, isocurvature fluctuations in the PQ field randomise the axion field, with no preferred value in the power spectrum.

The proper treatment in this scenario is to solve numerically the equation of motion of the PQ field in an expanding Universe, in order to capture all features coming from the misalignment mechanism, including the contribution from topological defects like "axionic" strings and domain walls. An axion mass estimate between 0.05 and 1.50 meV was reported by Borsanyi et al. (2016).[19] The result was calculated by simulating the formation of axions during the post-inflation period on a supercomputer.[20]

Recent progresses in determining the present abundance of a KSVZ-type axion[c] using numerical simulations lead to values between 0.02 and 0.1 meV,[23][24] although these results have been challenged by the details on the power spectrum of emitted axions from strings.[25]

Phenomenology of the axion field edit

Searches edit

Axion models carefully choose coupling strengths that are too weak to have been detected in prior experiments. It had been thought that these "invisible axions" solved the strong CP problem while still being too small to have been observed before. Current literature discusses "invisible axion" mechanisms in two forms, called KSVZ (KimShifmanVainshteinZakharov)[21][22] and DFSZ (DineFischlerSrednickiZhitnitsky).[26][27]

The very weakly coupled axion is also very light, because axion couplings and mass are proportional. Satisfaction with "invisible axions" changed when it was shown that any very light axion would have been overproduced in the early universe and therefore must be excluded.[10][11][12]

Maxwell's equations with axion modifications edit

Pierre Sikivie computed how Maxwell's equations are modified in the presence of an axion in 1983.[28] He showed that these axions could be detected on Earth by converting them to photons, using a strong magnetic field, motivating a number of experiments. For example, the Axion Dark Matter Experiment converts axion dark matter to microwave photons, the CERN Axion Solar Telescope converts axions produced in the Sun's core to X-rays, and other experiments search for axions produced in laser light.[29] Currently, there are dozens of proposed or ongoing experiments searching for axion dark matter.[30]

The equations of axion electrodynamics are typically written in "natural units", where the reduced Planck's constant  , speed of light  , and permittivity of free space   are all set to unity. In this unit system, they are:

Name Equations
Gauss's law  
Gauss's law for magnetism  
Faraday's law  
Ampère–Maxwell law  
Axion field's equation of motion  

Above, a dot denotes a time derivative and the axion-photon coupling is  .

Alternative forms of these equations have been proposed, which imply completely different physical signatures. For example, Visinelli wrote a set of equations that imposed duality symmetry, assuming the existence of magnetic monopoles.[31] However, these alternative formulations are less theoretically motivated, and in many cases cannot even be derived from an action.

Analogous effect for topological insulators edit

A term analogous to the one that would be added to Maxwell's equations to account for axions[32] also appears in recent (2008) theoretical models for topological insulators giving an effective axion description of the electrodynamics of these materials.[33]

This term leads to several interesting predicted properties including a quantized magnetoelectric effect.[34] Evidence for this effect has been given in THz spectroscopy experiments performed at the Johns Hopkins University on quantum regime thin film topological insulators developed at Rutgers University.[35]

In 2019, a team at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids published their detection of axion insulators within a Weyl semimetal.[36] An axion insulator is a quasiparticle – an excitation of electrons that behave together as an axion – and its discovery is consistent with the existence of the axion as an elementary particle.[37]

Experiments edit

Despite not yet having been found, axion models have been well studied for over 40 years, giving time for physicists to develop insight into axion effects that might be detected. Several experimental searches for axions are presently underway; most exploit axions' expected slight interaction with photons in strong magnetic fields. Axions are also one of the few remaining plausible candidates for dark matter particles, and might be discovered in some dark matter experiments.

 
Constraints on the axion's coupling to the photon
 
Constraints on the axion's dimensionless coupling to electrons

Direct conversion in a magnetic field edit

Several experiments search for astrophysical axions by the Primakoff effect, which converts axions to photons and vice versa in electromagnetic fields.

The Axion Dark Matter Experiment (ADMX) at the University of Washington uses a strong magnetic field to detect the possible weak conversion of axions to microwaves.[38] ADMX searches the galactic dark matter halo[39] for axions resonant with a cold microwave cavity. ADMX has excluded optimistic axion models in the 1.9–3.53 μeV range.[40][41][42] From 2013 to 2018 a series of upgrades[43] were done and it is taking new data, including at 4.9–6.2 µeV. In December 2021 it excluded the 3.3–4.2 μeV range for the KSVZ model.[44][45]

Other experiments of this type include DMRadio,[46] HAYSTAC,[47] CULTASK,[48] and ORGAN.[49] HAYSTAC recently completed the first scanning run of a haloscope above 20 µeV.[47]

Polarized light in a magnetic field edit

The Italian PVLAS experiment searches for polarization changes of light propagating in a magnetic field. The concept was first put forward in 1986 by Luciano Maiani, Roberto Petronzio and Emilio Zavattini.[50] A rotation claim[51] in 2006 was excluded by an upgraded setup.[52] An optimized search began in 2014.

Light shining through walls edit

Another technique is so called "light shining through walls",[53] where light passes through an intense magnetic field to convert photons into axions, which then pass through metal and are reconstituted as photons by another magnetic field on the other side of the barrier. Experiments by BFRS and a team led by Rizzo ruled out an axion cause.[54] GammeV saw no events, reported in a 2008 Physics Review Letter. ALPS I conducted similar runs,[55] setting new constraints in 2010; ALPS II is currently being built in 2022.[56] OSQAR found no signal, limiting coupling[57] and will continue.

Astrophysical axion searches edit

Axion-like bosons could have a signature in astrophysical settings. In particular, several recent works have proposed axion-like particles as a solution to the apparent transparency of the Universe to TeV photons.[58][59] It has also been demonstrated that, in the large magnetic fields threading the atmospheres of compact astrophysical objects (e.g., magnetars), photons will convert much more efficiently. This would in turn give rise to distinct absorption-like features in the spectra detectable by current telescopes.[60] A new promising means is looking for quasi-particle refraction in systems with strong magnetic gradients. In particular, the refraction will lead to beam splitting in the radio light curves of highly magnetized pulsars and allow much greater sensitivities than currently achievable.[61] The International Axion Observatory (IAXO) is a proposed fourth generation helioscope.[62]

Axions can resonantly convert into photons in the magnetospheres of neutron stars.[63] The emerging photons lie in the GHz frequency range and can be potentially picked up in radio detectors, leading to a sensitive probe of the axion parameter space. This strategy has been used to constrain the axion-photon coupling in the 5–11 μeV mass range, by re-analyzing existing data from the Green Bank Telescope and the Effelsberg 100 m Telescope.[64] A novel, alternative strategy consists in detecting the transient signal from the encounter between a neutron star and an axion minicluster in the Milky Way.[65]

Axions can be produced in the Sun's core when X-rays scatter in strong electric fields. The CAST solar telescope is underway, and has set limits on coupling to photons and electrons. Axions may be produced within neutron stars, by nucleon-nucleon bremsstrahlung. The subsequent decay of axions to gamma rays allows constraints on the axion mass to be placed from observations of neutron stars in gamma-rays using the Fermi LAT. From an analysis of four neutron stars, Berenji et al. (2016) obtained a 95% confidence interval upper limit on the axion mass of 0.079 eV.[66] In 2021 it has been also suggested[67][68] that a reported[69] excess of hard X-ray emission from a system of neutron stars known as the magnificent seven could be explained as axion emission.

In 2016, a theoretical team from Massachusetts Institute of Technology devised a possible way of detecting axions using a strong magnetic field that need be no stronger than that produced in an MRI scanning machine. It would show variation, a slight wavering, that is linked to the mass of the axion. As of 2019, the experiment is being implemented by experimentalists at the university.[70]

In 2022 the polarized light measurements of Messier 87* by the EHT were used to constrain the mass of the axion assuming that hypothetical clouds of axions could form around a black hole rejecting the ~  eV/c^2 range of mass values.[71][72]

Searches for resonance effects edit

Resonance effects may be evident in Josephson junctions[73] from a supposed high flux of axions from the galactic halo with mass of 110 µeV and density 0.05 GeV/cm3[74] compared to the implied dark matter density 0.3±0.1 GeV/cm3, indicating said axions would not have enough mass to be the sole component of dark matter. The ORGAN experiment plans to conduct a direct test of this result via the haloscope method.[49]

Dark matter recoil searches edit

Dark matter cryogenic detectors have searched for electron recoils that would indicate axions. CDMS published in 2009 and EDELWEISS set coupling and mass limits in 2013. UORE and XMASS also set limits on solar axions in 2013. XENON100 used a 225-day run to set the best coupling limits to date and exclude some parameters.[75]

Nuclear spin precession edit

While Schiff's theorem states that a static nuclear electric dipole moment (EDM) does not produce atomic and molecular EDMs,[76] the axion induces an oscillating nuclear EDM which oscillates at the Larmor frequency. If this nuclear EDM oscillation frequency is in resonance with an external electric field, a precession in the nuclear spin rotation occurs. This precession can be measured using precession magnetometry and if detected, would be evidence for Axions.[77]

An experiment using this technique is the Cosmic Axion Spin Precession Experiment (CASPEr).[78][79][80]

Searches at particle colliders edit

Axions may also be produced at colliders, in particular in electron positron collisions as well as in ultra-peripheral heavy ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, reinterpreting the light-by-light scattering process. Those searches are sensitive for rather large axion masses between 100 MeV/c² and hundreds of GeV/c². Assuming a coupling of axions to the Higgs Boson, searches for anomalous Higgs boson decays into two axions can theoretically provide even stronger limits.[81]

Possible detections edit

It was reported in 2014 that evidence for axions may have been detected as a seasonal variation in observed X-ray emission that would be expected from conversion in the Earth's magnetic field of axions streaming from the Sun. Studying 15 years of data by the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton observatory, a research group at Leicester University noticed a seasonal variation for which no conventional explanation could be found. One potential explanation for the variation, described as "plausible" by the senior author of the paper, is the known seasonal variation in visibility to XMM-Newton of the sunward magnetosphere in which X-rays may be produced by axions from the Sun's core.[82][83]

This interpretation of the seasonal variation is disputed by two Italian researchers, who identify flaws in the arguments of the Leicester group that are said to rule out an interpretation in terms of axions. Most importantly, the scattering in angle assumed by the Leicester group to be caused by magnetic field gradients during the photon production, necessary to allow the X-rays to enter the detector that cannot point directly at the sun, would dissipate the flux so much that the probability of detection would be negligible.[84]

In 2013, Christian Beck suggested that axions might be detectable in Josephson junctions; and in 2014, he argued that a signature, consistent with a mass ≈110 μeV, had in fact been observed in several preexisting experiments.[85]

In 2020, the XENON1T experiment at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory in Italy reported a result suggesting the discovery of solar axions.[86] The results are not yet significant at the 5-sigma level required for confirmation, and other explanations of the data are possible though less likely.[87] New observations made in July 2022, after the observatory upgrade to XENONnT, discarded the excess thus ending the possibility of new particle discovery.[88][89]

Properties edit

Predictions edit

One theory of axions relevant to cosmology had predicted that they would have no electric charge, a very small mass in the range from 1 µeV/c² to 1 eV/c², and very low interaction cross-sections for strong and weak forces. Because of their properties, axions would interact only minimally with ordinary matter. Axions would also change to and from photons in magnetic fields.

Cosmological implications edit

Inflation suggests that if they exist, axions would be created abundantly during the Big Bang.[90] Because of a unique coupling to the instanton field of the primordial universe (the "misalignment mechanism"), an effective dynamical friction is created during the acquisition of mass, following cosmic inflation. This robs all such primordial axions of their kinetic energy.[citation needed]

Ultralight axion (ULA) with m ~ 10−22 eV is a kind of scalar field dark matter which seems to solve the small scale problems of CDM. A single ULA with a GUT scale decay constant provides the correct relic density without fine-tuning.[91]

Axions would also have stopped interaction with normal matter at a different moment after the Big Bang than other more massive dark particles.[why?] The lingering effects of this difference could perhaps be calculated and observed astronomically.[citation needed]

If axions have low mass, thus preventing other decay modes (since there are no lighter particles to decay into), theories[which?] predict that the universe would be filled with a very cold Bose–Einstein condensate of primordial axions. Hence, axions could plausibly explain the dark matter problem of physical cosmology.[92] Observational studies are underway, but they are not yet sufficiently sensitive to probe the mass regions if they are the solution to the dark matter problem with the fuzzy dark matter region starting to be probed via superradiance.[93] High mass axions of the kind searched for by Jain and Singh (2007)[94] would not persist in the modern universe. Moreover, if axions exist, scatterings with other particles in the thermal bath of the early universe unavoidably produce a population of hot axions.[95]

Low mass axions could have additional structure at the galactic scale. If they continuously fall into galaxies from the intergalactic medium, they would be denser in "caustic" rings, just as the stream of water in a continuously flowing fountain is thicker at its peak.[96] The gravitational effects of these rings on galactic structure and rotation might then be observable.[97][98] Other cold dark matter theoretical candidates, such as WIMPs and MACHOs, could also form such rings, but because such candidates are fermionic and thus experience friction or scattering among themselves, the rings would be less sharply defined.[citation needed]

João G. Rosa and Thomas W. Kephart suggested that axion clouds formed around unstable primordial black holes might initiate a chain of reactions that radiate electromagnetic waves, allowing their detection. When adjusting the mass of the axions to explain dark matter, the pair discovered that the value would also explain the luminosity and wavelength of fast radio bursts, being a possible origin for both phenomena.[99] In 2022 a similar hypothesis was used to constrain the mass of the axion from data of M87*.[citation needed]

Supersymmetry edit

In supersymmetric theories the axion has both a scalar and a fermionic superpartner. The fermionic superpartner of the axion is called the axino, the scalar superpartner is called the saxion or dilaton. They are all bundled in a chiral superfield.

The axino has been predicted to be the lightest supersymmetric particle in such a model.[100] In part due to this property, it is considered a candidate for dark matter.[101]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ This non-trivial vacuum structure solves a problem associated to the U(1) axial symmetry of QCD[3][4]
  2. ^ One simple solution to the strong CP problem exists: If at least one of the quarks of the standard model is massless, CP-violation becomes unobservable. However, empirical evidence strongly suggests that none of the quarks are massless. Consequently, particle theorists sought other resolutions to the problem of inexplicably conserved CP.
  3. ^ At present, physics literature discusses "invisible axion" mechanisms in two forms, one of them is called KSVZ for KimShifmanVainshteinZakharov.[21][22] See discussion in the "Searches" section, below.

References edit

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  • Franz, Marcel (24 November 2008). "article". APS Physics. 1.
  • "news article". New Scientist. 28 January 2007.
  • . physorg.com. 6 December 2006. Archived from the original on 7 December 2006.
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  • . Spain: UNIZAR. Archived from the original on 2016-04-15. Retrieved 2015-08-12.
  • . Darmstadt, Germany: University of Technology. Archived from the original on 2009-03-18.
  • . Seattle, Washington: University of Washington. Archived from the original on 2015-02-14. Retrieved 2008-03-21.
  • "Axion in nLab".

axion, confused, with, axiom, axon, other, uses, disambiguation, axion, hypothetical, elementary, particle, originally, postulated, peccei, quinn, theory, 1977, resolve, strong, problem, quantum, chromodynamics, axions, exist, have, mass, within, specific, ran. Not to be confused with axiom or axon For other uses see Axion disambiguation An axion ˈ ae k s i ɒ n is a hypothetical elementary particle originally postulated by the Peccei Quinn theory in 1977 to resolve the strong CP problem in quantum chromodynamics QCD If axions exist and have low mass within a specific range they are of interest as a possible component of cold dark matter AxionInteractionsGravitational electromagnetic strong nuclear weak nuclearStatusHypotheticalSymbolA0 a 8Theorized1977 Peccei and QuinnMass10 5 to 1 eV c2 1 Electric charge0Spin0 Contents 1 History 1 1 Strong CP problem 1 2 Prediction 2 Axion dark matter 2 1 Pre inflationary scenario 2 2 Post inflationary scenario 3 Phenomenology of the axion field 3 1 Searches 3 2 Maxwell s equations with axion modifications 3 3 Analogous effect for topological insulators 4 Experiments 4 1 Direct conversion in a magnetic field 4 2 Polarized light in a magnetic field 4 3 Light shining through walls 4 4 Astrophysical axion searches 4 5 Searches for resonance effects 4 6 Dark matter recoil searches 4 7 Nuclear spin precession 4 8 Searches at particle colliders 5 Possible detections 6 Properties 6 1 Predictions 6 2 Cosmological implications 6 3 Supersymmetry 7 See also 8 Footnotes 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksHistory editStrong CP problem edit As shown by Gerard t Hooft 2 strong interactions of the standard model QCD possess a non trivial vacuum structure a that in principle permits violation of the combined symmetries of charge conjugation and parity collectively known as CP Together with effects generated by weak interactions the effective periodic strong CP violating term 8 appears as a Standard Model input its value is not predicted by the theory but must be measured However large CP violating interactions originating from QCD would induce a large electric dipole moment EDM for the neutron Experimental constraints on the currently unobserved EDM implies CP violation from QCD must be extremely tiny and thus 8 must itself be extremely small Since 8 could have any value between 0 and 2p this presents a naturalness problem for the standard model Why should this parameter find itself so close to zero Or why should QCD find itself CP preserving This question constitutes what is known as the strong CP problem b Prediction edit In 1977 Roberto Peccei and Helen Quinn postulated a more elegant solution to the strong CP problem the Peccei Quinn mechanism The idea is to effectively promote 8 to a field This is accomplished by adding a new global symmetry called a Peccei Quinn PQ symmetry that becomes spontaneously broken This results in a new particle as shown independently by Frank Wilczek 5 and Steven Weinberg 6 that fills the role of 8 naturally relaxing the CP violation parameter to zero Wilczek named this new hypothesized particle the axion after a brand of laundry detergent because it cleaned up a problem 7 8 while Weinberg called it the higglet Weinberg later agreed to adopt Wilczek s name for the particle 8 Because it has a non zero mass the axion is a pseudo Nambu Goldstone boson 9 Axion dark matter editQCD effects produce an effective periodic potential in which the axion field moves The oscillations of the axion field about the minimum of the effective potential the so called misalignment mechanism generate a cosmological population of cold axions with an abundance depending on the mass of the axion 10 11 12 With a mass above 5 µeV c 10 11 times the electron mass axions could account for dark matter and thus be both a dark matter candidate and a solution to the strong CP problem If inflation occurs at a low scale and lasts sufficiently long the axion mass can be as low as 1 peV c 13 14 15 There are two distinct scenarios in which the axion field begins its evolution depending on the following two conditions a The PQ symmetry is spontaneously broken during inflation This condition is realized whenever the axion energy scale is larger than the Hubble rate at the end of inflation b The PQ symmetry is never restored after its spontaneous breaking occurs This condition is realized whenever the axion energy scale is larger than the maximum temperature reached in the post inflationary Universe Broadly speaking one of the two possible scenarios outlined in the two following subsections occurs Pre inflationary scenario edit If both a and b are satisfied cosmic inflation selects one patch of the Universe within which the spontaneous breaking of the PQ symmetry leads to a homogeneous value of the initial value of the axion field In this pre inflationary scenario topological defects are inflated away and do not contribute to the axion energy density However other bounds that come from isocurvature modes severely constrain this scenario which require a relatively low energy scale of inflation to be viable 16 17 18 Post inflationary scenario edit If at least one of the conditions a or b is violated the axion field takes different values within patches that are initially out of causal contact but that today populate the volume enclosed by our Hubble horizon In this scenario isocurvature fluctuations in the PQ field randomise the axion field with no preferred value in the power spectrum The proper treatment in this scenario is to solve numerically the equation of motion of the PQ field in an expanding Universe in order to capture all features coming from the misalignment mechanism including the contribution from topological defects like axionic strings and domain walls An axion mass estimate between 0 05 and 1 50 meV was reported by Borsanyi et al 2016 19 The result was calculated by simulating the formation of axions during the post inflation period on a supercomputer 20 Recent progresses in determining the present abundance of a KSVZ type axion c using numerical simulations lead to values between 0 02 and 0 1 meV 23 24 although these results have been challenged by the details on the power spectrum of emitted axions from strings 25 Phenomenology of the axion field editSearches edit Axion models carefully choose coupling strengths that are too weak to have been detected in prior experiments It had been thought that these invisible axions solved the strong CP problem while still being too small to have been observed before Current literature discusses invisible axion mechanisms in two forms called KSVZ Kim Shifman Vainshtein Zakharov 21 22 and DFSZ Dine Fischler Srednicki Zhitnitsky 26 27 The very weakly coupled axion is also very light because axion couplings and mass are proportional Satisfaction with invisible axions changed when it was shown that any very light axion would have been overproduced in the early universe and therefore must be excluded 10 11 12 Maxwell s equations with axion modifications edit Pierre Sikivie computed how Maxwell s equations are modified in the presence of an axion in 1983 28 He showed that these axions could be detected on Earth by converting them to photons using a strong magnetic field motivating a number of experiments For example the Axion Dark Matter Experiment converts axion dark matter to microwave photons the CERN Axion Solar Telescope converts axions produced in the Sun s core to X rays and other experiments search for axions produced in laser light 29 Currently there are dozens of proposed or ongoing experiments searching for axion dark matter 30 The equations of axion electrodynamics are typically written in natural units where the reduced Planck s constant ℏ displaystyle hbar nbsp speed of light c displaystyle c nbsp and permittivity of free space e 0 displaystyle varepsilon 0 nbsp are all set to unity In this unit system they are Name EquationsGauss s law E r g a g g B a displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf E rho g a gamma gamma mathbf B cdot nabla a nbsp Gauss s law for magnetism B 0 displaystyle nabla cdot mathbf B 0 nbsp Faraday s law E B displaystyle nabla times mathbf E dot mathbf B nbsp Ampere Maxwell law B E J g a g g a B E a displaystyle nabla times mathbf B dot mathbf E mathbf J g a gamma gamma dot a mathbf B mathbf E times nabla a nbsp Axion field s equation of motion a 2 2 a m a 2 a g a g g E B displaystyle ddot a 2 nabla 2 a m a 2 a g a gamma gamma mathbf E cdot mathbf B nbsp Above a dot denotes a time derivative and the axion photon coupling is g a g g displaystyle g a gamma gamma nbsp Alternative forms of these equations have been proposed which imply completely different physical signatures For example Visinelli wrote a set of equations that imposed duality symmetry assuming the existence of magnetic monopoles 31 However these alternative formulations are less theoretically motivated and in many cases cannot even be derived from an action Analogous effect for topological insulators edit A term analogous to the one that would be added to Maxwell s equations to account for axions 32 also appears in recent 2008 theoretical models for topological insulators giving an effective axion description of the electrodynamics of these materials 33 This term leads to several interesting predicted properties including a quantized magnetoelectric effect 34 Evidence for this effect has been given in THz spectroscopy experiments performed at the Johns Hopkins University on quantum regime thin film topological insulators developed at Rutgers University 35 In 2019 a team at the Max Planck Institute for Chemical Physics of Solids published their detection of axion insulators within a Weyl semimetal 36 An axion insulator is a quasiparticle an excitation of electrons that behave together as an axion and its discovery is consistent with the existence of the axion as an elementary particle 37 Experiments editDespite not yet having been found axion models have been well studied for over 40 years giving time for physicists to develop insight into axion effects that might be detected Several experimental searches for axions are presently underway most exploit axions expected slight interaction with photons in strong magnetic fields Axions are also one of the few remaining plausible candidates for dark matter particles and might be discovered in some dark matter experiments nbsp Constraints on the axion s coupling to the photon nbsp Constraints on the axion s dimensionless coupling to electronsDirect conversion in a magnetic field edit Several experiments search for astrophysical axions by the Primakoff effect which converts axions to photons and vice versa in electromagnetic fields The Axion Dark Matter Experiment ADMX at the University of Washington uses a strong magnetic field to detect the possible weak conversion of axions to microwaves 38 ADMX searches the galactic dark matter halo 39 for axions resonant with a cold microwave cavity ADMX has excluded optimistic axion models in the 1 9 3 53 meV range 40 41 42 From 2013 to 2018 a series of upgrades 43 were done and it is taking new data including at 4 9 6 2 µeV In December 2021 it excluded the 3 3 4 2 meV range for the KSVZ model 44 45 Other experiments of this type include DMRadio 46 HAYSTAC 47 CULTASK 48 and ORGAN 49 HAYSTAC recently completed the first scanning run of a haloscope above 20 µeV 47 Polarized light in a magnetic field edit The Italian PVLAS experiment searches for polarization changes of light propagating in a magnetic field The concept was first put forward in 1986 by Luciano Maiani Roberto Petronzio and Emilio Zavattini 50 A rotation claim 51 in 2006 was excluded by an upgraded setup 52 An optimized search began in 2014 Light shining through walls edit Another technique is so called light shining through walls 53 where light passes through an intense magnetic field to convert photons into axions which then pass through metal and are reconstituted as photons by another magnetic field on the other side of the barrier Experiments by BFRS and a team led by Rizzo ruled out an axion cause 54 GammeV saw no events reported in a 2008 Physics Review Letter ALPS I conducted similar runs 55 setting new constraints in 2010 ALPS II is currently being built in 2022 56 OSQAR found no signal limiting coupling 57 and will continue Astrophysical axion searches edit Axion like bosons could have a signature in astrophysical settings In particular several recent works have proposed axion like particles as a solution to the apparent transparency of the Universe to TeV photons 58 59 It has also been demonstrated that in the large magnetic fields threading the atmospheres of compact astrophysical objects e g magnetars photons will convert much more efficiently This would in turn give rise to distinct absorption like features in the spectra detectable by current telescopes 60 A new promising means is looking for quasi particle refraction in systems with strong magnetic gradients In particular the refraction will lead to beam splitting in the radio light curves of highly magnetized pulsars and allow much greater sensitivities than currently achievable 61 The International Axion Observatory IAXO is a proposed fourth generation helioscope 62 Axions can resonantly convert into photons in the magnetospheres of neutron stars 63 The emerging photons lie in the GHz frequency range and can be potentially picked up in radio detectors leading to a sensitive probe of the axion parameter space This strategy has been used to constrain the axion photon coupling in the 5 11 meV mass range by re analyzing existing data from the Green Bank Telescope and the Effelsberg 100 m Telescope 64 A novel alternative strategy consists in detecting the transient signal from the encounter between a neutron star and an axion minicluster in the Milky Way 65 Axions can be produced in the Sun s core when X rays scatter in strong electric fields The CAST solar telescope is underway and has set limits on coupling to photons and electrons Axions may be produced within neutron stars by nucleon nucleon bremsstrahlung The subsequent decay of axions to gamma rays allows constraints on the axion mass to be placed from observations of neutron stars in gamma rays using the Fermi LAT From an analysis of four neutron stars Berenji et al 2016 obtained a 95 confidence interval upper limit on the axion mass of 0 079 eV 66 In 2021 it has been also suggested 67 68 that a reported 69 excess of hard X ray emission from a system of neutron stars known as the magnificent seven could be explained as axion emission In 2016 a theoretical team from Massachusetts Institute of Technology devised a possible way of detecting axions using a strong magnetic field that need be no stronger than that produced in an MRI scanning machine It would show variation a slight wavering that is linked to the mass of the axion As of 2019 the experiment is being implemented by experimentalists at the university 70 In 2022 the polarized light measurements of Messier 87 by the EHT were used to constrain the mass of the axion assuming that hypothetical clouds of axions could form around a black hole rejecting the 10 21 10 20 displaystyle 10 21 10 20 nbsp eV c 2 range of mass values 71 72 Searches for resonance effects edit Resonance effects may be evident in Josephson junctions 73 from a supposed high flux of axions from the galactic halo with mass of 110 µeV and density 0 05 GeV cm3 74 compared to the implied dark matter density 0 3 0 1 GeV cm3 indicating said axions would not have enough mass to be the sole component of dark matter The ORGAN experiment plans to conduct a direct test of this result via the haloscope method 49 Dark matter recoil searches edit Dark matter cryogenic detectors have searched for electron recoils that would indicate axions CDMS published in 2009 and EDELWEISS set coupling and mass limits in 2013 UORE and XMASS also set limits on solar axions in 2013 XENON100 used a 225 day run to set the best coupling limits to date and exclude some parameters 75 Nuclear spin precession edit While Schiff s theorem states that a static nuclear electric dipole moment EDM does not produce atomic and molecular EDMs 76 the axion induces an oscillating nuclear EDM which oscillates at the Larmor frequency If this nuclear EDM oscillation frequency is in resonance with an external electric field a precession in the nuclear spin rotation occurs This precession can be measured using precession magnetometry and if detected would be evidence for Axions 77 An experiment using this technique is the Cosmic Axion Spin Precession Experiment CASPEr 78 79 80 Searches at particle colliders edit Axions may also be produced at colliders in particular in electron positron collisions as well as in ultra peripheral heavy ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN reinterpreting the light by light scattering process Those searches are sensitive for rather large axion masses between 100 MeV c and hundreds of GeV c Assuming a coupling of axions to the Higgs Boson searches for anomalous Higgs boson decays into two axions can theoretically provide even stronger limits 81 Possible detections editIt was reported in 2014 that evidence for axions may have been detected as a seasonal variation in observed X ray emission that would be expected from conversion in the Earth s magnetic field of axions streaming from the Sun Studying 15 years of data by the European Space Agency s XMM Newton observatory a research group at Leicester University noticed a seasonal variation for which no conventional explanation could be found One potential explanation for the variation described as plausible by the senior author of the paper is the known seasonal variation in visibility to XMM Newton of the sunward magnetosphere in which X rays may be produced by axions from the Sun s core 82 83 This interpretation of the seasonal variation is disputed by two Italian researchers who identify flaws in the arguments of the Leicester group that are said to rule out an interpretation in terms of axions Most importantly the scattering in angle assumed by the Leicester group to be caused by magnetic field gradients during the photon production necessary to allow the X rays to enter the detector that cannot point directly at the sun would dissipate the flux so much that the probability of detection would be negligible 84 In 2013 Christian Beck suggested that axions might be detectable in Josephson junctions and in 2014 he argued that a signature consistent with a mass 110 meV had in fact been observed in several preexisting experiments 85 In 2020 the XENON1T experiment at the Gran Sasso National Laboratory in Italy reported a result suggesting the discovery of solar axions 86 The results are not yet significant at the 5 sigma level required for confirmation and other explanations of the data are possible though less likely 87 New observations made in July 2022 after the observatory upgrade to XENONnT discarded the excess thus ending the possibility of new particle discovery 88 89 Properties editPredictions edit One theory of axions relevant to cosmology had predicted that they would have no electric charge a very small mass in the range from 1 µeV c to 1 eV c and very low interaction cross sections for strong and weak forces Because of their properties axions would interact only minimally with ordinary matter Axions would also change to and from photons in magnetic fields Cosmological implications edit Inflation suggests that if they exist axions would be created abundantly during the Big Bang 90 Because of a unique coupling to the instanton field of the primordial universe the misalignment mechanism an effective dynamical friction is created during the acquisition of mass following cosmic inflation This robs all such primordial axions of their kinetic energy citation needed Ultralight axion ULA with m 10 22 eV is a kind of scalar field dark matter which seems to solve the small scale problems of CDM A single ULA with a GUT scale decay constant provides the correct relic density without fine tuning 91 Axions would also have stopped interaction with normal matter at a different moment after the Big Bang than other more massive dark particles why The lingering effects of this difference could perhaps be calculated and observed astronomically citation needed If axions have low mass thus preventing other decay modes since there are no lighter particles to decay into theories which predict that the universe would be filled with a very cold Bose Einstein condensate of primordial axions Hence axions could plausibly explain the dark matter problem of physical cosmology 92 Observational studies are underway but they are not yet sufficiently sensitive to probe the mass regions if they are the solution to the dark matter problem with the fuzzy dark matter region starting to be probed via superradiance 93 High mass axions of the kind searched for by Jain and Singh 2007 94 would not persist in the modern universe Moreover if axions exist scatterings with other particles in the thermal bath of the early universe unavoidably produce a population of hot axions 95 Low mass axions could have additional structure at the galactic scale If they continuously fall into galaxies from the intergalactic medium they would be denser in caustic rings just as the stream of water in a continuously flowing fountain is thicker at its peak 96 The gravitational effects of these rings on galactic structure and rotation might then be observable 97 98 Other cold dark matter theoretical candidates such as WIMPs and MACHOs could also form such rings but because such candidates are fermionic and thus experience friction or scattering among themselves the rings would be less sharply defined citation needed Joao G Rosa and Thomas W Kephart suggested that axion clouds formed around unstable primordial black holes might initiate a chain of reactions that radiate electromagnetic waves allowing their detection When adjusting the mass of the axions to explain dark matter the pair discovered that the value would also explain the luminosity and wavelength of fast radio bursts being a possible origin for both phenomena 99 In 2022 a similar hypothesis was used to constrain the mass of the axion from data of M87 citation needed Supersymmetry edit In supersymmetric theories the axion has both a scalar and a fermionic superpartner The fermionic superpartner of the axion is called the axino the scalar superpartner is called the saxion or dilaton They are all bundled in a chiral superfield The axino has been predicted to be the lightest supersymmetric particle in such a model 100 In part due to this property it is considered a candidate for dark matter 101 See also edit nbsp Physics portalDark photon List of hypothetical particles Weakly interacting slender particleFootnotes edit This non trivial vacuum structure solves a problem associated to the U 1 axial symmetry of QCD 3 4 One simple solution to the strong CP problem exists If at least one of the quarks of the standard model is massless CP violation becomes unobservable However empirical evidence strongly 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1978 A new light boson Physical Review Letters 40 4 223 226 Bibcode 1978PhRvL 40 223W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 40 223 S2CID 610538 Wilczek Frank 1978 Problem of strong P and T invariance in the presence of instantons Physical Review Letters 40 5 279 282 Bibcode 1978PhRvL 40 279W doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 40 279 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Axions nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Axion Franz Marcel 24 November 2008 article APS Physics 1 news article New Scientist 28 January 2007 news article physorg com 6 December 2006 Archived from the original on 7 December 2006 Collins Graham P 17 July 2006 A Hint of Axions Scientific American news article PhysicsWeb org 27 March 2006 Archived from the original on 3 December 2008 Retrieved 6 April 2006 news article PhysicsWeb org 24 November 2004 Archived from the original on 10 March 2007 Retrieved 28 November 2004 CAST Experiment Switzerland CERN Archived from the original on 2013 01 16 Retrieved 2007 09 23 CAST Spain UNIZAR Archived from the original on 2016 04 15 Retrieved 2015 08 12 CAST Darmstadt Germany University of Technology Archived from the original on 2009 03 18 ADMX Seattle Washington University of Washington Archived from the original on 2015 02 14 Retrieved 2008 03 21 Axion in nLab Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Axion amp oldid 1197375424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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