Detectability of accretion-induced bosenovae in the Milky Way

Abstract

We estimate collapse rates of axion stars in our galaxy based on the axion minicluster mass function of the Milky Way dark matter halo. We consider axion-like particles with different temperature evolution of the axion mass, including the QCD axion with ma=50\,μeV. Combining estimates for the present-day axion star mass function from our previous work with the axion star accretion model predicted by self-similar growth, we can infer the expected number of bosenovae occurring within the Milky Way. Our estimates suggest that for an observation time of tobs=1\,yr, the majority of the up to 1013 bosenovae per galaxy occur in the densest miniclusters with initial overdensity parameter 104. We discuss the detectability of such recurring axion bursts within our galactic vicinity and find that, for models with derivative couplings including axion-fermion interactions, potential broadband axion DM experiments can probe a large range of ALP masses ma 10-6\,eV and with moderate improvements even the QCD axion case. For axions with non-derivative-type interactions like the axion-photon coupling, our analysis suggests that optimistic predictions with order-one dark matter abundance of axion stars f 1 can be probed by dedicated burst searches.

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