Sensitivity to Axion-like Particle dark matter with very-high-energy gamma-ray observations of Active Galactic Nuclei located behind Galaxy Clusters
Abstract
Axion-Like-Particles (ALPs) are hypothetical pseudo-scalar particles actively searched as light dark matter candidates. The coupling of ALPs to photons can give rise to distinctive spectral features in the observed gamma-ray spectrum of astrophysical sources. We perform a forecast study on the sensitivity to ALP-photon interactions using stacked mock observations of selected active galactic nuclei (AGNs) located behind galaxy clusters (GC). The ALP-photon conversion in the magnetic fields of galaxy clusters give rise to absorption-like features in AGN spectra that are subject to large variance in their prediction for individual sources. We consider here a stacking analysis of multiple AGN-cluster pairs, which yields a more controlled prediction of the expected ALP-induced spectral patterns in the observed gamma-ray spectra. Using realistic mock observations of selected Fermi-LAT AGNs by ongoing Imaging Atmospheric Cherenkov Telescopes such as H.E.S.S., MAGIC and VERITAS, we provide a careful assessment of the expected sensitivity of a combined statistical analysis of many AGN-GC pairs, together with the impact of modelling and instrumental uncertainties. The sensitivity reaches ALP-photon couplings down to 6×10-13 GeV-1 for an ALP mass of 3×10-8 eV, and is currently statistically dominated indicating further improvements from more observations. Such a stacking analysis approach enables exploration of the yet-uncharted ALP dark matter parameter space in the 10-8 - 10-7 eV mass range.
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