Revisiting the axion bounds from the Galactic white dwarf luminosity function
Marcelo M. Miller Bertolami, Brenda E. Melendez, Leandro G. Althaus, and Jordi Isern

TL;DR
This study refines constraints on DFSZ-axion masses by incorporating axion feedback into white dwarf models and comparing theoretical luminosity functions with observations, finding that higher axion masses are disfavored.
Contribution
It introduces self-consistent white dwarf models including axion feedback and performs multiple derivations of the luminosity function to better constrain axion properties.
Findings
Axion emission significantly affects high-luminosity white dwarfs.
Current data disfavors axion masses above 10 meV.
Lower axion masses remain compatible with observations.
Abstract
It has been shown that the shape of the luminosity function of white dwarfs (WDLF) is a powerful tool to check for the possible existence of DFSZ-axions, a proposed but not yet detected type of weakly interacting particles. With the aim of deriving new constraints on the axion mass, we compute in this paper new theoretical WDLFs on the basis of WD evolving models that incorporate for the feedback of axions on the thermal structure of the white dwarf. We find that the impact of the axion emission into the neutrino emission can not be neglected at high luminosities () and that the axion emission needs to be incorporated self-consistently into the evolution of the white dwarfs when dealing with axion masses larger than meV (i.e. axion-electron coupling constant ). We went beyond previous works by including 5…
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