Radiation Burst by Axion Star Collision with Star in the Andromeda Galaxy
Abstract
Axion is a promising candidate of dark matter in the universe. A fraction of dark matter axion may forms axion star with radius 102km. We show that the axion star emits radiation burst by the collision with K and M types main sequence star in the Andromeda Galaxy. The emission arises in the atmosphere of the star, in which electrons coherently oscillate due to oscillating electric field of the axion star. The electric field is produced under magnetic field B of the star. We estimate the flux density of the radiation 1.6× 10-3Jy (10-12M/Ma)2(10-5eV/ma)3(B/102G)23×103K/T and the rate of the collision per hour 0.06/hour\,(10-12M/Ma) in the galaxy, where Ma ( ma ) denotes the mass of axion star ( axion ) and T does temperature of the electrons. We assume the number 1011 of the stars with B 102G and radius 3.5×105km in the galaxy. We also assume that a half of the dark matter is composed of axion star. We show that the emission of the radiation burst only arises in the atmosphere in which the plasma frequency mp ma. The duration of the burst lasts for the period which it takes the axion star to pass the region with mp ma. It would be longer than 1 second.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.