Stellar Disruption of Axion Minihalos and Consequences for Direct Axion Detection
Ian DSouza

TL;DR
This paper investigates how stellar encounters disrupt axion minihalos, revealing that such interactions are more destructive than previously thought, which impacts the local axion density and detection strategies.
Contribution
It introduces a new formula for minihalo mass loss considering profile changes and multiple encounters, improving the accuracy of disruption estimates in the Galactic environment.
Findings
Stellar interactions reduce minihalo mass retention to ~30%.
Enhanced disruption increases inter-minihalo axion fraction.
Implications for improved axion detection prospects.
Abstract
Scenarios such as the QCD axion with the Peccei-Quinn symmetry broken after inflation predict an enhanced matter power spectrum on sub-parsec scales. These theories lead to the formation of dense dark matter structures known as minihalos, which provide insights into early Universe dynamics and have implications for direct detection experiments. We examine the mass loss of minihalos during stellar encounters, building on previous studies that derived formulas for mass loss and performed N-body simulations. We propose a new formula for the mass loss that accounts for changes in the minihalo profile after disruption by a passing star. We also investigate the mass loss for multiple stellar encounters. We demonstrate that accurately assessing the mass loss in minihalos due to multiple stellar encounters necessitates considering the alterations in the minihalo's binding energy after each…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena · Chemical and Physical Properties of Materials · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
