Chern-Simons induced thermal friction on axion domain walls
Journal of High Energy Physics Springer 2025:3 (2025) 22
Abstract:
We study the dynamics and interactions of the solitonic domain walls that occur in realistic axion electrodynamics models including the Chern-Simons interaction, aϵμνλσFμνFλσ, between an axion a(x) of mass ma, and a massless U(1) gauge field, e.g. EM, interacting with strength α = e2/4π with charged matter, e.g. electron-positron pairs. In particular, in the presence of a U(1) gauge-and-matter relativistic thermal plasma we study the friction experienced by the walls due to the Chern-Simons term. Utilizing the linear response method we include the collective effects of the plasma, as opposed to purely particle scattering across the wall (as is done in previous treatments) which is valid only in the thin wall regime that is rarely applicable in realistic cases. We show that the friction depends on the Lorentz-γ-factor-dependent inverse thickness of the wall in the plasma frame, ℓ−1 ~ γma, compared to the three different plasma scales, the temperature T, the Debye mass mD ~ αT, and the damping rate Γ ~ α2T, and elucidate the underlying physical intuition for this behavior. (For friction in the thin-wall-limit we correct previous expressions in the literature.) We further consider the effects of long-range coherent magnetic fields that are possibly present in the early universe and compare their effect with that of thermal magnetic fields. We comment on the changes to our results that likely apply in the thermal deconfined phase of a non-Abelian gauge theory. Finally, we briefly discuss the possible early universe consequences of our results for domain wall motion and network decay, stochastic gravitational wave production from domain wall networks, and possible primordial black hole production from domain wall collapse, though a more complete discussion of these topics is reserved for a companion paper.Search for Neutrino Emission from Hard X-Ray AGN with IceCube
The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 981:2 (2025) 131
Abstract:
Active galactic nuclei (AGN) are promising candidate sources of high-energy astrophysical neutrinos, since they provide environments rich in matter and photon targets where cosmic-ray interactions may lead to the production of gamma rays and neutrinos. We searched for high-energy neutrino emission from AGN using the Swift-BAT Spectroscopic Survey catalog of hard X-ray sources and 12 yr of IceCube muon track data. First, upon performing a stacked search, no significant emission was found. Second, we searched for neutrinos from a list of 43 candidate sources and found an excess from the direction of two sources, the Seyfert galaxies NGC 1068 and NGC 4151. We observed NGC 1068 at flux ϕνμ+ν¯μ = 4.02−1.52+1.58×10−11 TeV−1 cm−2 s−1 normalized at 1 TeV, with a power-law spectral index γ = 3.10 −0.22+0.26 , consistent with previous IceCube results. The observation of a neutrino excess from the direction of NGC 4151 is at a posttrial significance of 2.9σ. If interpreted as an astrophysical signal, the excess observed from NGC 4151 corresponds to a flux ϕνμ+ν¯μ = 1.51−0.81+0.99×10−11 TeV−1 cm−2 s−1 normalized at 1 TeV and γ = 2.83 −0.28+0.35 .Probing the PeV Region in the Astrophysical Neutrino Spectrum using $ν_μ$ from the Southern Sky
ArXiv 2502.19776 (2025)
Seasonal Variations of the Atmospheric Muon Neutrino Spectrum measured with IceCube
ArXiv 2502.1789 (2025)
Measurement of the inelasticity distribution of neutrino-nucleon
interactions for $\mathbf{80~GeV
ArXiv 2502.13299 (2025)