Signals of the QCD axion with mass of 17 MeV/c^2: nuclear transitions and light meson decays
Daniele S. M. Alves

TL;DR
This paper proposes that a QCD axion with specific properties explains observed anomalies in nuclear de-excitations and predicts detectable signals in rare meson decays, linking experimental hints to axion physics.
Contribution
It introduces a QCD axion model with properties that explain nuclear anomaly observations and provides detailed predictions for rare meson decay signatures.
Findings
QCD axion with ~17 MeV mass explains nuclear anomalies
Predicted rare meson decay rates are within experimental reach
Suppressed isovector couplings naturally explain absence of other anomalies
Abstract
The QCD axion remains experimentally viable in the mass range of O(10 MeV) if (i) it couples predominantly to the first generation of SM fermions; (ii) it decays to with a short lifetime s; and (iii) it has suppressed isovector couplings, i.e., if it is piophobic. Remarkably, these are precisely the properties required to explain recently observed anomalies in nuclear de-excitations, to wit: the emission spectra of isoscalar magnetic transitions of Be and He nuclei showed a "bump-like" feature peaked at MeV. In this article, we argue that on-shell emission of the QCD axion (with the aforementioned properties) provides an extremely well-motivated, compatible explanation for the observed excesses in these nuclear de-excitations. The absence of anomalous features in other measured transitions is also…
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