The End of the Rainbow: What Can We Say About the Extragalactic Sub-Megahertz Radio Sky?
Brian C. Lacki

TL;DR
This paper explores how the universe can be used to detect and set limits on low-frequency extragalactic radio waves below 1 MHz, which are otherwise blocked by the Galactic disc, by analyzing their effects on cosmic structures.
Contribution
It introduces new methods to constrain the energy density of sub-MHz radio waves using cosmological effects and sets upper limits based on these effects, advancing understanding of the low-frequency radio universe.
Findings
Upper limit of 6 * 10^4 L_sun Mpc^-3 for Lyman-alpha clouds.
Sub-MHz energy density in the Coma cluster < 10^-15 erg/cm^3.
Limits are not yet strong enough to exclude a T_b = 10^12 K synchrotron background.
Abstract
The Galactic disc is opaque to radio waves from extragalactic sources with frequencies nu less than ~3 MHz. However, radio waves with kHz, Hz, and even lower frequencies may propagate through the intergalactic medium (IGM). I argue that the presence of these waves can be inferred by using the Universe as our detector. I discuss possible sub-MHz sources and set new non-trivial upper limits on the energy density of sub-MHz radio waves in galaxy clusters and the average cosmic background. Limits based on five effects are considered: (1) changes in the expansion of the Universe from the radiation energy density (2) heating of the IGM by free-free absorption; (3) radiation pressure squeezing of IGM clouds by external radio waves; (4) synchrotron heating of electrons in clusters; and (5) Inverse Compton upscattering of sub-MHz radio photons. Any sub-MHz background must have an energy density…
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