3–7 Jun 2019
Europe/Berlin timezone

Axion superradiance in rotating neutron stars

7 Jun 2019, 12:45
20m
Main Lecture Hall (Physics Department)

Main Lecture Hall

Physics Department

Oral Morning 52

Speaker

Dr Francesca Day (University of Cambridge)

Description

It is a well-known fact that compact gravitating objects admit bound state configurations for massive bosonic fields. We describe a new class of superradiant instabilities of axion bound states in neutron star magnetospheres. The instability arises from the mixing of axion and photon modes in the magnetic field of the neutron star which extract energy from the rotating magnetosphere. Unlike for black holes, where the dissipation required for superradiance is provided by an absorbative horizon, the non-hermitian dynamics in this mechanism come from the resistivity in the stellar magnetosphere arising from a finite bulk conductivity. The axion field mixes with photon modes which superradiantly scatter off the magnetosphere, extracting rotational energy which is then deposited back into the axion sector leading to an instability. We derive the superradiant eigenfrequencies for the axion-photon system using quantum mechanical perturbation theory on the axion boundstate, drawing an analogy with atomic selection rules. We then compare the characteristic time scale of the instability to the spin-down measurements of pulsars which limit the allowed rate of angular momentum extraction from neutron stars.

Primary author

Dr Francesca Day (University of Cambridge)

Presentation materials