Litcius/Paper detail

Searching for axion-like particle decay in the near-infrared background: an updated analysis

Andrea Caputo, Andrea Vittino, N. Fornengo, Marco Regis, Marco Taoso

2021RWTH Publications (RWTH Aachen)18 citationsOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The extragalactic background light is comprised of the cumulative radiation from all galaxies across the history of the universe. The angular power spectrum of the anisotropies of such a background at near-infrared (IR) frequencies lacks of a complete understanding and shows a robust excess which cannot be easily explained with known sources. Dark matter in the form of axion-like particles (ALPs) with a mass around the electronvolt will decay into two photons with wavelengths in the near-IR band, possibly contributing to the background intensity. We compute the near-IR background angular power spectrum including emissions from galaxies, as well as the contributions from the intra-halo light and ALP decay, and compare it to measurements from the Hubble Space Telescope and Spitzer. We find that the preferred values for the ALP mass and ALP-photon coupling to explain the excess are in tension with star cooling data and observations of dwarf spheroidal galaxies.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsAstrophysicsGalaxyDark matterAxionAstronomyCosmic infrared backgroundInfraredCosmic background radiationBackground radiationExtragalactic background lightUniverseCosmic microwave backgroundRadiationAnisotropyRedshiftNuclear physicsQuantum mechanicsDark Matter and Cosmic PhenomenaGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, PhenomenaCosmology and Gravitation Theories