Searches for signatures of ultra-light axion dark matter in polarimetry data of the European Pulsar Timing Array
N. K. Porayko, P. Usynina, J. Terol-Calvo, J. Martin Camalich, G. M., Shaifullah, A. Castillo, D. Blas, L. Guillemot, M. Peel, C. Tiburzi, K., Postnov, M. Kramer, J. Antoniadis, S. Babak, A.-S. Bak Nielsen, E. Barausse,, C. G. Bassa, C. Blanchard, M. Bonetti, E. Bortolas

TL;DR
This study searches for ultra-light axion-like particles using pulsar polarimetry data, finding no significant signals but setting bounds on axion properties and discussing limitations and future improvements.
Contribution
First to analyze pulsar polarimetry data for axion signatures, providing new constraints on axion-photon coupling and highlighting data analysis challenges.
Findings
No significant axion signal detected in the data.
Established bounds on axion-photon coupling in specific mass range.
Identified terrestrial ionosphere effects as a potential source of false signals.
Abstract
Ultra-light axion-like particles (ALPs) can be a viable solution to the dark matter problem. The scalar field associated with ALPs, coupled to the electromagnetic field, acts as an active birefringent medium, altering the polarisation properties of light through which it propagates. In particular, oscillations of the axionic field induce monochromatic variations of the plane of linearly polarised radiation of astrophysical signals. The radio emission of millisecond pulsars provides an excellent tool to search for such manifestations, given their high fractional linear polarisation and negligible fluctuations of their polarisation properties. We have searched for the evidence of ALPs in the polarimetry measurements of pulsars collected and preprocessed for the European Pulsar Timing Array (EPTA) campaign. Focusing on the twelve brightest sources in linear polarisation, we searched for an…
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