THEORETICAL ASPECTS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

THEORETICAL ASPECTS

Description:

Consider a photon beam in vacuo with k along the z-axis. ... 'Sic stantibus rebus'.... INDEPENDENT CHECKS of PVLAS claim look COMPELLING. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:75
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: ronca4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: THEORETICAL ASPECTS


1
THEORETICAL ASPECTS
  • Marco Roncadelli, INFN Pavia (Italy)

2
OUTLINE
  • QED VACUUM EFFECTS
  • AXION-LIKE PARTICLES
  • ASTROPHYSICAL CONSTRAINTS
  • IMPLICATIONS OF PVLAS
  • DOUBLE PULSAR J0737-3039

3
QED VACUUM EFFECTS
  • Consider a photon beam in vacuo with k along the
    z-axis. External B field present (only x, y
    components of B relevant).
  • CLASSICALLY beam propagation UNAFFECTED by B.
  • QUANTUM corrections change the situation, since
    virtual fermion exchange produces a photon-photon
    interaction.

4
  • At one-loop, proceeds via a box
    diagram and at low-energy is described by
  • Presently a photon can be replaced by B .

5
  • From above lagrangian propagation eigenstates are
    polarization states ,
  • (with respect to the B-k plane). Because
    amplitude for depends on initial
    photon polarization, two conclusions follow.
  • . , propagate
    with different velocities .
    .
  • BIREFRINGENCE .

6
  • . do not split but
    split into
  • two . selective photon absorption .
    DICHROISM .
  • Suppose now the photon beam is at the beginning
    LINEARLY polarized.
  • Owing to birefringence alone an ELLIPTICAL
    polarization shows up
  • Due to dichroism alone polarization ROTATEs,
    since decreases and increases.

7
  • Net effect ELLIPTICITY with ellipses major axis
    ROTATED.
  • In 1979 E. Iacopini and E. Zavattini proposed to
    measure the B-induced vacuum birefringence with a
    PVLAS-like apparatus.
  • N.B. Dichroism down by .

8
AXION-LIKE PARTICLES
  • In 1977 R. Peccei and H. Quinn proposed a
    solution of the strong CP problem based on an
    additional global U(1) symmetry. Soon after S.
    Weinberg and F. Wilczek realized that the PQ
    symmetry is spontaneously broken, thereby giving
    rise to a Goldstone boson the Axion. Actually
    QCD instanton effects break the PQ symmetry also
    explicitly, so that the axion gets a mass

9
  • where is the scale at which the PQ
    symmetry is spontaneously broken.
  • Originally it was supposed that
  • but it was soon realized that resulting axion
    is experimentally RULED OUT.

10
  • WAY OUT . INVISIBLE axion models.
  • Yukawa couplings of axion to quarks produce an
    effective 2 photon coupling at one-loop of the
    form

11
  • with
  • where k O(1) is model-dependent. So
  • the axion obeys the mass-coupling relation

12
  • N.B. Invisible axions excellent candidates for
    cold nonbaryonic DARK MATTER candidates for
    .
  • In 1983 Sikivie pointed out that invisible axions
    can be DETECTED owing to their 2 photon coupling.
    Axion-photon conversion analogous to neutrino
    OSCILLATIONS but here a nonvanishing transverse B
    is necessary to account for spin mismatch.

13
  • Transition probability energy-independent for
    oscillation wavenumber dominated by photon-axion
    mixing term. As long as photon energy is much
    larger than m WKB approximation the
    SECOND-order propagation equation for a
    monochromatic beam reduces to a FIRST-order one.

14
  • Sikivie considered 3 observational strategies (2
    based on a tunable resonant cavity).
  • Axion ELIOSCOPE . detection of SOLAR axions.
  • Axion HALOSCOPE . detection of DARK MATTER
    axions.
  • Regeneration experiment . shining light through
    a wall.

15
  • In 1986 L. Maiani, R. Petronzio and E. Zavattini
    realized that axions can be searched for by a
    PVLAS-like experiment.
  • Consider again a photon beam LINEARLY polarized
    initially which propagates in a magnetized
    vacuum. MIX with the axion while do NOT
    (pseudoscalar coupling).

16
  • Virtual axion exchange affects propagation of
    but not of .... BIREFRINGENCE.
  • Real axion photo-production depletes the
  • polarization mode only .DICHROISM.
  • M and m UNIQUELY determined in terms of the beam
    ellipticity and rotation angle.
  • N.B. MPZ strategy INDEPENDENT of actual
  • PRESENCE of axions in the laboratory.

17
  • AXION-LIKE PARTICLES (ALPs) are present in many
    extensions of the SM and are described by either
  • or
  • with m and M ARBITRARY parameters (a priori).
  • N.B. All above considerations apply to ALPs as
    well.

18
  • Everything goes like for the axion case .... in a
    PVLAS-like experiment both m and M of an ALP can
    be DETERMINED by measuring both ellipticity and
    rotation angle of a laser beam with initial
    linear polarization.
  • N.B. I assume ALP to be pseudoscalar.

19
ASTROPHYSICAL CONSTRAINTS
  • THEORETICAL BOUND Thermal photons produced in
    central regions of stars can become ALPs in the
    fluctuating EM field of stellar plasma. In
    main-sequence stars this occurs via Primakoff
    scattering off ions. The ALPs escape . star
    looses energy . central temperature increases .
    observed properties change. Agreement between
    standard stellar models and observations

20
  • demands that unwanted ALP effects have to be
    sufficiently suppressed.
  • Sun . .
  • Red giants .
  • CAST EXPERIMENT Blind magnetic telescope is
    pointed toward the Sun detection of KeV-energy
    photons would the signal for axions coming from
    the Sun.

21
  • Remarkably CAST yields
  • for .

22
IMPLICATIONS OF PVLAS
  • ASSUME that PVLAS has detected an ALP with
    and .
  • N.B. Alternatives are possible!
  • A look back at m-M relation . this ALP is NOT
    the axion.
  • Theoretical astrophysical bound as well as CAST
    bound VIOLATED by 5 orders of magnitudes.

23
  • MORAL
  • A NEW PARTICLE has been discovered.
  • NEW PHYSICS at low-energy MUST exist to make
    the 2 photon coupling MUCH WEAKER in stellar
    environment than in laboratory.
  • Some possibilities have been explored based on
    plasma effects in paraphoton models and a sub-KeV
    phase transition.

24
  • Sic stantibus rebus. INDEPENDENT CHECKS of
    PVLAS claim look COMPELLING.
  • Experiments similar to PVLAS.
  • Photon regeneration experiments.
  • Astrophysical effects with UNSUPPRESSED 2 photon
    coupling.

25
DOUBLE PULSAR J0737-3039
  • Discovered in 2003.
  • Orbital period T 2.45 h.
  • Rotation periods P(A) 23 ms, P(B)
  • 2.8 s.
  • Inclination of orbital plane i 90.29 deg . it
    is seen almost EDGE-ON.
  • Focus on emission from A.

26
(No Transcript)
27
  • Pulsar B has DIPOLAR magnetic field
  • on the surface.
  • LARGE impact parameter . NOTHING interesting
    happens.
  • SMALL impact parameter . beam from A traverses
    magnetosphere of B .
  • photon-ALP conversion IMPORTANT depending on
    m, M.

28
  • TWO effects are expected.
  • Production of real ALPs . periodic attenuation
    of photon beam which depends on T, P(B).
  • N.B. Analog of DICHROISM in PVLAS experiment.

29
  • Exchange of virtual ALPs . periodic LENSING
    which depends on T, P(B).
  • N.B. Analog of BIREFRINGENCE in PVLAS
    experiment.
  • Here I consider only attenuation effect (A.
    Dupays, C. Rizzo, M. R., G. F. Bignami, Phys.
    Rev.Lett. 95 211302 (2005)).

30
  • We work within WKB approximation and solve
    numerically the first-order propagation equation
    for an UNPOLARIZED, monochromatic beam travelling
    in the dipolar B produced by pulsar B. Resulting
    transition probability as a function of beam
    frequency is

31
(No Transcript)
32
  • N.B. Effect relevant ABOVE 10 MeV . remarkable
    result.
  • J0737-3039 is expected to be a gamma-ray SOURCE.
  • Interaction of photon beam with plasma in
    magnetosphere of B is NEGLIGIBLE.
  • WKB approximation JUSTIFIED.

33
  • INTUITIVE explanation assuming B constant i.e.
    for .
  • Mixing effects important for mixing angle in
    photon-ALP system of order 1 . OK with THRESHOLD
    behaviour.

34
  • Transition probability becomes energy-independent
    for oscillation wavenumber dominated by
    photon-ALP mixing term . OK with FLAT behaviour.
  • TEMPORAL behaviour best described by TRANSMISSION
    1 P. We find beam attenuation up to 50 as

35
(No Transcript)
36
  • This effect turns out to be OBSERVABLE with
    GLAST.
  • For example, ABSENCE of attenuation A at 10
    level yields the exclusion plot

37
(No Transcript)
38
  • This attenuation requires 100 counts during
    observation time. For 2 weeks
  • in agreement with expectations and about 1000
    times LARGER than GLAST sensitivity threshold for
    point sources.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com