Observing invisible axions with gravitational waves
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics IOP Publishing 2021:06 (2021) 034
Abstract:
If the Peccei-Quinn symmetry associated to an axion has ever been restored after inflation, axion strings inevitably produce a contribution to the stochastic gravitational wave background. Combining effective field theory analysis with numerical simulations, we show that the resulting gravitational wave spectrum has logarithmic deviations from a scale invariant form with an amplitude that is significantly enhanced at low frequencies. As a result, a single ultralight axion-like particle with a decay constant larger than 1014 GeV and any mass between 10-18 eV and 10-28 eV leads to an observable gravitational wave spectrum and is compatible with constraints on the post-inflationary scenario from dark matter overproduction, isocurvature and dark radiation. Since the spectrum extends over a wide range of frequencies, the resulting signal could be detected by multiple experiments. We describe straightforward ways in which the Peccei-Quinn symmetry can be restored after inflation for such decay constants. We also comment on the recent possible NANOgrav signal in light of our results.More axions from strings
SciPost Physics Stichting SciPost 10:2 (2021) 050
More axions from strings
SciPost Physics SciPost Foundation 10:2 (2021) 050
Abstract:
We study the contribution to the QCD axion dark matter abundance that is produced by string defects during the so-called scaling regime. Clear evidence of scaling violations is found, the most conservative extrapolation of which strongly suggests a large number of axions from strings. In this regime, nonlinearities at around the QCD scale are shown to play an important role in determining the final abundance. The overall result is a lower bound on the QCD axion mass in the post-inflationary scenario that is substantially stronger than the naive one from misalignment.Axion Quasiparticles for Axion Dark Matter Detection
(2021)
Observing Invisible Axions with Gravitational Waves
(2021)