Constraints on Axion-Like Particles from VERITAS Observations of a Flaring Radio Galaxy in the Perseus Cluster
C. B. Adams, A. Archer, P. Bangale, J. T. Bartkoske, W. Benbow, Y. Chen, J. L. Christiansen, A. J. Chromey, A. Duerr, M. Errando, M. Escobar Godoy, J. Escudero Pedrosa, S. Feldman, Q. Feng, S. Filbert, L. Fortson, A. Furniss, W. Hanlon, O. Hervet, C. E. Hinrichs, J. Holder

TL;DR
This study uses VERITAS gamma-ray observations of a flaring radio galaxy in the Perseus Cluster to search for axion-like particles, setting new constraints on their properties but finding no evidence of their existence.
Contribution
First application of the CLs method to gamma-ray data for ALP constraints, providing a conservative and robust analysis approach.
Findings
No evidence for ALPs was found in the data.
Constraints on ALP parameters are consistent with previous studies.
Strongest exclusion at $g_{a ext{ extminus}} ightarrow 3 imes 10^{-11}$ GeV$^{-1}$ for $m_a ightarrow 4 imes 10^{-7}$ eV.
Abstract
Background: Axion-like particles (ALPs) are hypothetical particles that emerge in numerous theoretical extensions to the Standard Model. Their coupling to electromagnetic field implies that ALPs would mix with photons in the presence of external magnetic fields. As ALP phenomenology is governed by the mass and strength of its coupling, there is a subset of this parameter space in which this mixing would be expected to leave an imprint on the spectra of TeV gamma-ray sources. Data: In 2017, the VERITAS gamma-ray observatory recorded the second day of a dramatic flare of the radio galaxy NGC 1275, embedded at the center of the Perseus galaxy cluster. This serendipitous locale provides a spatially-extended magnetic field of strength O(10G) through which escaping photons traverse, making it an excellent target to study ALPs. Methods: We analyze the VERITAS data of NGC 1275's 2017…
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