Probing a cosmic axion-like particle background within the jets of active galactic nuclei
Ahmed Ayad, Geoff Beck

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential of active galactic nuclei jets to probe axion-like particles (ALPs) and constrains their coupling to photons, providing new insights into the cosmic ALP background and dark matter models.
Contribution
It demonstrates how AGN jet environments can be used to test and constrain low-mass ALP models, especially in relation to the cosmic ALP background and X-ray excess explanations.
Findings
ALP-photon coupling range constrained to ~7.5e-15 to 6.56e-14 GeV^{-1} for ALP masses below 1e-13 eV.
Results suggest current limits on ALP-photon coupling may be overestimated, proposing a tighter upper bound.
The study links ALP models to observable X-ray emissions in the M87 jet environment.
Abstract
Axions or more generally axion-like particles (ALPs) are pseudo-scalar particles predicted by many extensions of the Standard Model of particle physics (SM) and considered as viable candidates for dark matter (DM) in the universe. If they really exist in nature, they are expected to couple with photons in the presence of an external electromagnetic field through a form of the Primakoff effect. In addition, many string theory models of the early universe motivate the existence of a homogeneous Cosmic ALP Background (CAB) with 0.1-1 keV energies analogous to the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), arising via the decay of string theory moduli in the very early universe. The coupling between the CAB ALPs traveling in cosmic magnetic fields and photons allows ALPs to oscillate into photons and vice versa. In this work, we test the CAB model that is put forward to explain the soft X-ray…
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