Stellar Superradiance and Low-Energy Absorption in Dense Nuclear Media
Zhaoyu Bai, Vitor Cardoso, Yifan Chen, Yuyan Li, Jamie I. McDonald, Hyeonseok Seong

TL;DR
This paper investigates how collective effects in dense nuclear matter suppress the superradiant growth of ultralight bosons around neutron stars, refining previous estimates based on microphysical absorption rates.
Contribution
It demonstrates that collective multiple-scattering effects significantly reduce superradiance rates, challenging naive extrapolations from microphysical absorption data.
Findings
Naive microphysical absorption rates suggest superradiance could be very efficient.
Collective multiple-scattering effects suppress superradiance rates in dense nuclear media.
Superradiance rates are much lower than previously estimated when collective effects are included.
Abstract
Ultralight bosons such as axions and dark photons are well-motivated hypothetical particles, whose couplings to ordinary matter can be effectively constrained by stellar cooling. Limits on these interactions can be obtained by demanding that their emission from the stellar interior does not lead to excessive energy loss. An intriguing question is whether the same microphysical couplings can also be probed through neutron star superradiance, in which gravitationally bound bosonic modes grow exponentially by extracting rotational energy from the star. Although both processes originate from boson-matter interactions, they probe very different kinematic regimes. Stellar cooling probes boson emission at thermal wavelengths, while superradiance is governed by modes whose wavelength is comparable to or greater than the size of the star. Previous work has attempted to relate the microphysical…
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