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Consistent frameworks of quantum gravity often predict the existence of large numbers of ultralight pseudoscalar degrees of freedom, forming the phenomenological landscape of the String Axiverse. The complexity of the extra-dimensional compactification manifolds and vacua determine that these fields could possess parameters with cosmologically significant scales, which span many decades. Astrophysical observations of stellar binary and supermassive black hole systems can be used to exclude the existence of certain ultralight massive bosons, via the superradiance phenomenon. In this work it is shown how these measurements can be used to constrain properties of statistical distributions for the masses of multiple bosonic field theories, inspired by axion field alignment models and an explicit realisation of the string axiverse in M-theory. Such a methodology can exclude $N_{rm ax} geq 30$ axion-like fields with a range of mass distribution widths and central values spanning many orders of magnitude, covering axion phenomenologies important to the dark sector and grand unified theories. This is demonstrated for several examples of axions in string theory and M-theory, where the mass distributions in certain cases take universal forms found in random matrix theory.
Axions arise in many theoretical extensions of the Standard Model of particle physics, in particular the string axiverse. If the axion masses, $m_a$, and (effective) decay constants, $f_a$, lie in specific ranges, then axions contribute to the cosmol
Astrophysical observations of spinning BHs, which span $ 5M_odotlesssim M_{rm BH}lesssim 5times 10^8 M_odot$, can be used to exclude the existence of certain massive bosons via the superradiance phenomenon. In this work, we explore for the first time
We consider an interacting field theory model that describes the interaction between dark energy - dark matter interaction. Only for a specific interaction term, this interacting field theory description has an equivalent interacting fluid descriptio
We explore the model-independent constraints from cosmology on a dark-matter particle with no prominent standard model interactions that interacts and thermalizes with other particles in a hidden sector. Without specifying detailed hidden-sector part
The process of superradiance can extract angular momentum and energy from astrophysical black holes (BHs) to populate gravitationally-bound states with an exponentially large number of light bosons. We analytically calculate superradiant growth rates