Looking for lights from the darkness

18 May 2026, 14:45
15m
二楼宴会C厅 (南京维景国际酒店)

二楼宴会C厅

南京维景国际酒店

Speaker

Yucheng QIU (City University of Hong Kong)

Description

The axion-like particles $a$ can be produced in the Sun via the process of $p + D \to {}^3{\rm He} +a$, with mass up to 5.5 MeV. The photons in the subsequent decay $a \to \gamma\gamma$ can deviate significantly from the Sun, or even from roughly the opposite direction of the Sun. The nontrivial angular and spectral distributions of such photons enable us new methods to detect the {\it lights from the darkness}. In this letter, we consider both the space detection and terrestrial experiments at the South Pole. As a result of the two-body decay and the geometric effects, there exists a critical height for the terrestrial experiments, below which there is no photon for some regions of the parameter space. With the sensitivities of $10^{-16}$ ($10^{-17}$) erg cm$^{-2}$ s$^{-1}$ for the MeV-scale photons in future space and terrestrial experiments, the coupling $g_{a\gamma}$ of $a$ to photons can be probed up to $3\times10^{-12}$ ($1\times10^{-12}$) GeV$^{-1}$, well surpassing the current supernova limits.

Primary authors

Yongchao Zhang (Southeast University) Yucheng QIU (City University of Hong Kong)

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