Recent research conducted by scientists from the University of Granada can contribute to determine the nature of dark matter, one of the most important mysteries in physics. As indirect evidence provided by its gravitational effects, dark matter amounts to more than 80% of the universe.
In an article published in the journal Physical Review Letters, Adrián Ayala and her PhD thesis supervisor, Inmaculada Domínguez, both members of the "FQM Stelar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis" research group, have set limits to the properties of one of the particles which aspire to be identified as dark matter: axions.
Researchers in this project also included Maurizio Giannotti (Barry University, USA), Alessandro Mirizzi (Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron, DESY, Germany) and Oscar Straniero (National Astrophysics Institute, INAF-Astronomic Observatory in Teramo, Italy). This project is evidence of the increasing collaboration between particle physicists and astrophysicists, which has originated a relatively new type of science 'astroparticle physics.'
In this project, scientists have used stars as particle physics labs: thanks to the high temperature inside stars, photons can turn into axions that escape to the exterior, carrying energy with them.
"This loss of energy can have consequences, whether they are observable or not, in some phases of stellar evolution," says Adrián Ayala. "In our research, we have conducted numerical simulations (by computer) of the evolution of a star, since its birth until it exhausts all the hydrogen first and then the helium in its interior, including the processes that produce axions"
Results indicate that the emission of axions can significantly diminish the time for the central combustion of helium, the so called HB (Horizontal Branch) phase: the energy taken by axions is compensated with the energy provided by nuclear combustion, which leads to a much faster consumption of helium.
"Using this influence over the timing that features in this sort of evolution we can determine the emission of axions, since a high emission rate means a quick HB phase, thus diminishing the possibility of watching stars in this phase," says Immaculada Domínguez.
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