Detectability of Accretion-Induced Bosenovae in the Milky Way

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Abstract

We estimate collapse rates of axion stars in our galaxy based on the axion minicluster mass function of the Milky Way dark matter halo. We consider axion-like particles with different temperature evolution of the axion mass, including the QCD axion with \(m_a = 50\mu\)eV. Combining estimates for the present-day axion star mass function from our previous work with the axion star accretion model predicted by self-similar growth, we can infer the expected number of bosenovae occurring within the Milky Way. Our estimates suggest that for an observation time of \(t_{obs} = 1\)yr, the majority of the up to \(\sim 10^{13}\) bosenovae per galaxy occur in the densest miniclusters with initial overdensity parameter \(\Phi \lesssim 10^4\). We discuss the detectability of such recurring axion bursts within our galactic vicinity and find that, for models with derivative couplings including axion-fermion interactions, potential broadband axion DM experiments can probe a large range of ALP masses \(m_a \lesssim 10^{-6}\)eV and with moderate improvements even the QCD axion case. For axions with non-derivative-type interactions like the axion-photon coupling, our analysis suggests that optimistic predictions with order-one dark matter abundance of axion stars \(f_\star \sim 1\) can be probed by dedicated burst searches.

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