ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
If primordial black holes with masses of $10^{25},mbox{g}gtrsim m gtrsim 10^{17},mbox{g}$ constitute a non-negligible fraction of the galactic dark-matter haloes, their existence should have observable consequences: they necessarily collide with galactic neutron stars, nest in their centers and accrete the dense matter, eventually converting them to neutron-star mass black holes while releasing the neutron-star magnetic field energy. Such processes may explain the fast radio bursts phenomenology, in particular their millisecond durations, large luminosities ${sim}10^{43}$ erg/s, high rate of occurrence $gtrsim 1000/mbox{day}$, as well as high brightness temperatures, polarized emission and Faraday rotation. Longer than the dynamical timescale of the Bondi-like accretion for light primordial black holes allows for the repeating fast radio bursts. This explanation follows naturally from (assumed) existence of the dark matter primordial black holes and requires no additional unusual phenomena, in particular no unacceptably large magnetic fields of neutron stars. In our model, the observed rate of fast radio bursts throughout the Universe follows from the presently known number of neutron stars in the Galaxy.
Primordial black holes (PBHs) are one of the most interesting non-particle dark matter (DM) candidates. They may explain all the DM content in the Universe in the mass regime about $10^{-14}M_{odot}-10^{-11}M_{odot}$. We study PBHs as the source of F
In this paper we propose the model that the coalescence of primordial black holes (PBHs) binaries with equal mass $M sim 10^{28}$g can emit luminous gigahertz (GHz) radio transient, which may be candidate sources for the observed fast radio bursts (F
Axions may make a significant contribution to the dark matter of the universe. It has been suggested that these dark matter axions may condense into localized clumps, called axion stars. In this paper we argue that collisions of dilute axion stars wi
Several fast radio bursts have been discovered recently, showing a bright, highly dispersed millisecond radio pulse. The pulses do not repeat and are not associated with a known pulsar or gamma-ray burst. The high dispersion suggests sources at cosmo
The possibility that primordial black holes (PBHs) form a part of dark matter has been considered for a long time but poorly constrained in the $1-100~M_{odot}$ (or stellar mass range). However, a renewed special interest of PBHs in this mass window