Astrophysical limits on very light axion-like particles from Chandra grating spectroscopy of NGC 1275

Abstract

Axions/axion-like particles (ALPs) are a well motivated extension of the Standard Model and are generic within String Theory. The X-ray transparency of the intracluster medium (ICM) in galaxy clusters is a powerful probe of light ALPs (with mass <10-11\, eV); as X-ray photons from an embedded or background source propagate through the magnetized ICM, they may undergo energy-dependent quantum mechanical conversion into ALPs (and vice versa), imprinting distortions on the X-ray spectrum. We present Chandra data for the active galactic nucleus NGC1275 at the center of the Perseus cluster. Employing a 490ks High-Energy Transmission Gratings (HETG) exposure, we obtain a high-quality 1-9keV spectrum free from photon pileup and ICM contamination. Apart from iron-band features, the spectrum is described by a power-law continuum, with any spectral distortions at the <3\% level. We compute photon survival probabilities as a function of ALP mass ma and ALP-photon coupling constant gaγ for an ensemble of ICM magnetic field models, and then use the NGC1275 spectrum to constraint the (ma, gaγ)-plane. Marginalizing over magnetic field realizations, the 99.7% credible region limits the ALP-photon coupling to gaγ<6-8× 10-13\, GeV-1 (depending upon magnetic field model) for masses ma<1× 10-12\, eV. These are the most stringent limit to date on gaγ for these light ALPs, and have already reached the sensitivity limits of next-generation helioscopes and light-shining-through-wall experiments. We highlight the potential of these studies with the next-generation X-ray observatories Athena and Lynx, but note the critical importance of advances in relative calibration of these future X-ray spectrometers.

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