Scalar-Induced Electromagnetic Radiation: Comparison with Axion-Like Particles and Implications for Modified Gravity
Wenyi Wang, Sousuke Noda, Taishi Katsuragawa

TL;DR
This paper explores electromagnetic signals from scalar fields in modified gravity, comparing them with axion-like particles, and discusses how resonance effects could help distinguish these fields observationally.
Contribution
It develops a theoretical framework for electromagnetic signatures of scalar fields in modified gravity, highlighting resonance effects and differences from axion-like particles.
Findings
Scalar fields can produce observable EM signatures from oscillating configurations.
Resonance effects can amplify EM radiation, aiding detection.
Differences in spectral features can help distinguish scalar fields from ALPs.
Abstract
The scalar-tensor theory of gravity, a modified gravity theory, introduces a fundamental scalar field that can serve as dynamical dark energy, driving the late-time accelerated expansion of the Universe. In this work, we analyze electromagnetic (EM) radiations arising from scalar fields and compare these features with those induced by axion-like particles (ALPs). Scalar and ALP fields couple differently to the EM field due to their distinct parity properties, for scalar fields and for ALPs. Building on analytical methods developed for ALPs, this work presents a theoretical feasibility analysis that demonstrates how the scalar field could produce observable EM signatures from oscillating field configurations. We also show that resonance effects can amplify the EM radiation for the scalar field under specific conditions,…
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