Saturday 10 January 2015

Weekend Plot: axion hunting

We just had a good laugh about the discovery of sharp-turning axions.  However, I should not leave you with the impression that there's something fishy in general with axion searches. On the contrary: while axions are hypothetical particles, they are arguably more motivated than all sorts of sthings and inos out there. Axions may explain the absence of a large  electric dipole moment of the neutron (the so-called strong-CP problem of QCD), and at the same time they may account for a part or all of dark matter in the Universe. The current state of experimental searches for axions is summarized in this plot:
The axes correspond to the two most relevant axion parameters: the mass, and the strength of its coupling to two photons (more precisely, the dimension-5 pion-like couplings to a photon field strength tensor and the dual tensor). In general, these can be independent parameters; however in particular models they are related. For example, in the KSVZ model - one of the QCD axion models solving the strong CP problem - one has m∼1/f and  g∼1/f, where f is the axion symmetry breaking scale. It follows that m and g are proportional to each other, as indicated by the green line in the plot. The yellow band is, roughly, the range predicted by other QCD axion models; therefore it is a natural beacon for axion searches. The CDM2 region in the band is where the QCD axion may account for all of dark matter in the universe.  

Currently, two experiments are at the forefront of axion searches. The CERN Axion Solar Telescope (CAST) attempts to detect axions produced in the Sun's core. The telescope is really a scavenged LHC magnet that converts axions into observable x-ray photons. CAST constrains the axion-photon coupling g  at the level of 10^-10/GeV for axion masses up to 1 eV (for larger masses the conversion length is too large for this setup). The Axion Dark Matter eXperiment (ADMX) targets axions of a different provenience. They search for conversion of axions that make the dark matter halo using a resonant microwave cavity within a magnet. They can probe much smaller values of the axion-photon couplings, but only for a small range of masses limited by the geometry of the cavity. Interestingly, both experiments have managed to probe parts of the QCD axion preferred region. Next stages of ADMX and CAST as well as the future IAXO telescope will continue to nibble the yellow band, although the dark matter preferred region may remain beyond our reach for quite some time...

8 comments:

Alex said...

The QCD axion may be the most fascinating dark matter model out there because the parameters have both minimum and maximum values. Some of those values might be challenging to probe, but at least they're a known target, and this investigation will have a definite endpoint. With WIMPs you can keep on hypothesizing smaller interaction cross-sections.

Anonymous said...

We know from the CMB measurements and the Lyman Alpha measurements that dark matter definitely has a rest mass greater than 1 keV, and likely greater than 5 keV. So, axions with rest masses less than 1 keV are not candidates for dark matter.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1306.2314

The best fit rest mass for dark matter (as far as Lyman Alpha measurements go) is between 14 keV and 100 keV. See article linked above.

The best fit 'thermal rest mass' for a fermion dark matter particle (as far as fitting galaxy rotation curves goes) is on the order of 3 keV.
http://arxiv.org/abs/1304.0759
http://arxiv.org/abs/1401.1214

A boson particle with rest mass less than 10 eV is not a viable dark matter particle.

Jester said...

These limits on the dark mater mass depend on how it is produced in the early universe. The relic abundance of axions is generated via the vacuum misalignment mechanism, which produces low momentum axions. One can show that QCD axions lighter than ~1 eV behave like cold dark matter from the point of view of the large scale structure. At the end of the day, axions are perfect dark matter candidates, in spite of the tiny mass.

Anonymous said...

There is the bottom of the barrel, and then here is hoping for a miracle in middle earth.

StevieB said...

It's been a long time, but as I recall, all the cmb can tell you about axions is that if pq symmetry breaking happens below the inflation scale, there may be a possibility of seeing isocurvature perturbations. So isocurvature perturbations would hint at axions, but the absence of them doesn't say anything about axions at all.

Of course, things might have moved on since then. Like I said, it's been a long time.

Anonymous said...

does the coupling say "gay" on purpose ? xD

Antonio (AKA "Un físico") said...

It is needed another post summarizing pros and cons of current dark matter candidates: axions, wimps & sterile neutrinos.

Anonymous said...

It's fine and all that axions might start with no momentum, but won't they acquire momentum as they interact with other particles and between themselves.

The point of dark matter is that it clumps together in the universe. If an axion has a mass of <10^-5 eV/c2, then it will gain momentum as it gravitationally attracts, and it will soon be relativistic...but this then stops the clumpiness.

How does a <10^-5 eV/c2 rest-mass axion remain non-relativistic while it clumps together?