Wednesday Colloquia
Dark Fires in the Sky: Compact Stars as Dark Matter Calorimeters
by Prof. Nirmal Raj (IISc Bangalore)
Wednesday, March 27, 2024
from
to
(Asia/Kolkata)
at AG-66 and via ZOOM webinar ( Zoom link: https://zoom.us/j/97963259354?pwd=ZFZsa2xqWGJSZW5pUjZPNkNqeGlEZz09 )
at AG-66 and via ZOOM webinar ( Zoom link: https://zoom.us/j/97963259354?pwd=ZFZsa2xqWGJSZW5pUjZPNkNqeGlEZz09 )
Meeting ID: 979 6325 9354
Pass code: 04072020
Description |
Dark matter is an invisible, ubiquitous substance that makes up four-fifths of all matter, yet its identity has remained a mystery despite heroic efforts to pinpoint it. One multi-faceted laboratory to study it is compact stars. Exploiting their exceptional properties such as ultra-high densities, deep fermion degeneracies, low temperatures, nucleon superfluidity, and strong magnetic fields, I will discuss numerous scenarios of dark matter that overheat -- or sometimes explode -- neutron stars and white dwarfs. The heating could be observed in the currently operational James Webb Space Telescope and an array of imminent observatories in the infrared optical, ultraviolet and x-ray. If undertaken by astronomers, these campaigns will constitute some of the most extensive searches for dark matter and new fundamental physics. References: [1] https://arxiv.org/abs/2307.14435 |