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2022-06-08 Seminar Report

Axion-like particles (ALPs) are a class of hypothetical bosons that feebly interact with ordinary matter. The hot plasma of stars and core-collapse supernovae is a possible laboratory to explore physics beyond the standard model, including ALPs. Once produced in a supernova, some of the ALPs can be absorbed by the supernova matter and affect energy transfer. The speaker recently consistently calculated the ALP emission in core-collapse supernovae and the backreaction on supernova dynamics. It is found that the stalled bounce shock can be revived if the coupling between ALPs and photons is as high as gaγ109 GeV1 and the ALP mass is 40-400 MeV.

Reported by Shigehiro Nagataki

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