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The effect of axion-like particles on the spectrum of the extragalactic gamma-ray background

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 Added by Yunfeng Liang
 Publication date 2020
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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Axion-like particles (ALPs) provide a feasible explanation for the observed low TeV opacity of the Universe. If the low TeV opacity is caused by ALP, then the $>{rm TeV}$ fluxes of unresolved extragalactic point sources will be correspondingly enhanced, resulting in an enhancement of the observed EGB spectrum at high energies. In this work, we for the first time investigate the ALP effect on the EGB spectrum. Our results show that the existence of ALPs can cause the EGB spectrum to deviate from a pure EBL absorption case. The deviation occurs at about $sim$1 TeV and current EGB measurements by Fermi-LAT cannot identify such an effect. The observation from forthcoming VHE instruments like LHAASO and CTA may be useful for studying this effect. We find that although most of the sensitive ALP parameters have been ruled out by existing ALP results, some unrestricted parameters could be probed with the EGB observation around 10 TeV.



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97 - F. Krennrich 2014
Indirect constraints on the intensity of the Extragalactic Background Light (EBL) were provided by recent studies of extragalactic sources emitting sub-TeV to multi-TeV photons. These constraints are provided thanks to the absorption of gamma rays by soft photons from the EBL (UV/optical/IR) via pair production by gamma - gamma interactions. This paper provides an overview of recent results that have led to substantially reduced uncertainties on the EBL intensity over a wide range of wavelengths from 0.1 to 15 micron.
The origin of the extragalactic $gamma$-ray background (EGB) has been debated for some time. { The EGB comprises the $gamma$-ray emission from resolved and unresolved extragalactic sources, such as blazars, star-forming galaxies and radio galaxies, as well as radiation from truly diffuse processes.} This letter focuses on the blazar source class, the most numerous detected population, and presents an updated luminosity function and spectral energy distribution model consistent with the blazar observations performed by the {it Fermi} Large Area Telescope (LAT). We show that blazars account for 50$^{+12}_{-11}$,% of the EGB photons ($>$0.1,GeV), and that {it Fermi}-LAT has already resolved $sim$70,% of this contribution. Blazars, and in particular low-luminosity hard-spectrum nearby sources like BL Lacs, are responsible for most of the EGB emission above 100,GeV. We find that the extragalactic background light, which attenuates blazars high-energy emission, is responsible for the high-energy cut-off observed in the EGB spectrum. Finally, we show that blazars, star-forming galaxies and radio galaxies can naturally account for the amplitude and spectral shape of the background in the 0.1--820,GeV range, leaving only modest room for other contributions. This allows us to set competitive constraints on the dark-matter annihilation cross section.
In this work, we re-analyze the Fermi-LAT observation of NGC 1275 to search for axion-like particle (ALP) effects and constrain ALP parameters. Instead of fitting the observed spectrum with ALP models, we adopt an alternative method for the analysis of this source which calculates the irregularity of the spectrum. With the newly used method, we find no spectral oscillation for the NGC 1275 and rule out couplings $g_{agamma}>3times10^{-12},{rm GeV^{-1}}$ around ALP mass of $m_asim$ 1 neV at 95% confidence level, which is more stringent than the previous results. We also show that the constraints can be further improved by combining the observation of PKS 2155-304. We suggest that with more sources taken into account, we could obtain a much wider exclusion region.
Coupling of axion-like particles (ALPs) to photons in the presence of background magnetic field affects propagation of gamma-rays through magnetized environments. This results in modification in the gamma-ray spectra of sources in or behind galaxy clusters. We search for the ALP induced effects in the Fermi/LAT and MAGIC telescope spectra of the radio galaxy NGC 1275 embedded in Perseus galaxy cluster. We report an order-of-magnitude improved upper limit on the ALP-photon coupling constant in the 0.1-10 neV mass range from non-detection of the ALP imprints on the gamma-ray spectra. The improved upper limit extends into the coupling range in which the ALP particles could form the dark matter. We estimate the sensitivity improvements for the ALP search achievable with extension of the measurements to lower and higher energies with e-ASTROGAM and CTA and show that the gamma-ray probe of ALPs with masses in $10^{-11}-10^{-7}$ eV range will be have order-of-magnitude better sensitivity compared to ground-based experiment IAXO.
Axion Like Particles (ALPs) are predicted to couple with photons in the presence of magnetic fields. This effect may lead to a significant change in the observed spectra of gamma-ray sources such as AGNs. Here we carry out a detailed study that for the first time simultaneously considers in the same framework both the photon/axion mixing that takes place in the gamma-ray source and that one expected to occur in the intergalactic magnetic fields. An efficient photon/axion mixing in the source always means an attenuation in the photon flux, whereas the mixing in the intergalactic medium may result in a decrement and/or enhancement of the photon flux, depending on the distance of the source and the energy considered. Interestingly, we find that decreasing the value of the intergalactic magnetic field strength, which decreases the probability for photon/axion mixing, could result in an increase of the expected photon flux at Earth if the source is far enough. We also find a 30% attenuation in the intensity spectrum of distant sources, which occurs at an energy that only depends on the properties of the ALPs and the intensity of the intergalactic magnetic field, and thus independent of the AGN source being observed. Moreover, we show that this mechanism can easily explain recent puzzles in the spectra of distant gamma-ray sources... [ABRIDGED] The consequences that come from this work are testable with the current generation of gamma-ray instruments, namely Fermi (formerly known as GLAST) and imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes like CANGAROO, HESS, MAGIC and VERITAS.
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