8–12 Aug 2022
America/Toronto timezone

Faint light of old neutron stars from dark matter capture and detectability at the James Webb Space Telescope

11 Aug 2022, 14:40
20m
Parallel Talk Dark Matter Dark Matter

Speaker

Shiuli Chatterjee

Description

Neutron stars (NS) of age >10^9 yrs exhaust thermal and rotational energies and cool down to temperatures below \mathcal{O}(100) K. Accretion of particle dark matter (DM) by such NS can heat them up through kinetic and annihilation processes. This increases the NS surface temperature to a maximum of \sim 2600 K in the best case scenario. The maximum accretion rate depends on the DM ambient density and velocity dispersion, and on the NS equation of state and their velocity distributions. Upon scanning over these variables, we find that the effective surface temperature varies at most by \sim 40\%. Black body spectrum of such warm NS peak at near infrared wavelengths with magnitudes in the range potentially detectable by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). Using the JWST exposure time calculator, we demonstrate that NS with surface temperatures \gtrsim 2400 K, located at a distance of 10 pc can be detected through the F150W2 (F322W2) filters of the NIRCAM instrument at SNR \gtrsim 10 (5) within 24 hours of exposure time.

Primary authors

Mr Brijesh Kanodia (Department of Physics and Centre for High Energy Physics, Indian Institute of Science) Dr M.S.N. Kumar (Instituto de Astrof ́ısica e Ciˆencias do Espa ̧co) Raghuveer Garani (INFN, Florence) Shiuli Chatterjee Dr Rajeev Kumar Jain (Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science) Sudhir Kumar Vempati

Presentation materials