Dark matter axion detection in the radio/mm-waveband
Richard A. Battye, Bjoern Garbrecht, Jamie I. McDonald, Francesco, Pace, Sankarshana Srinivasan

TL;DR
This paper explores axion dark matter detection in radio and millimeter wavelengths through spontaneous decays and neutron star resonant conversions, providing new theoretical models and analysis of observational strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed theoretical framework for axion-photon mixing in magnetised plasmas and assesses the observational prospects for detecting axions via radio signals.
Findings
Brightness temperature is a better measure than flux for decay signals.
Galactic centre and Virgo cluster are promising targets for decay detection.
Non-adiabatic conversion dominates in neutron star magnetospheres, affecting signal strength.
Abstract
We discuss axion dark matter detection via two mechanisms: spontaneous decays and resonant conversion in neutron star magnetospheres. For decays, we show that the brightness temperature signal, rather than flux, is a less ambiguous measure for selecting candidate objects. This is owing principally to the finite beam width of telescopes which prevents one from being sensitive to the total flux from the object. With this in mind, we argue that the large surface-mass-density of the galactic centre or the Virgo cluster centre offers the best chance of improving current constraints on the axion-photon coupling via spontaneous decays. For the neutron star case, we first carry out a detailed study of mixing in magnetised plasmas. We derive transport equations for the axion-photon system via a controlled gradient expansion, allowing us to address inhomogeneous mass-shell constraints for…
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