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Volume 119B, number 4,5,6 PHYSICS LETTERS 23•30 December 1982 NEW PARTICLES FROM NUCLEAR REACTIONS IN THE SUN Georg R A F F E L T l and Leo STODOLSKY Max-Planck-Institut far Physik und Astrophysik, ICerner.Heisenberg-Institut far Physik, Munich, Fed. Rep. Germany Received 26 July 1982 New light particles can be produced by nuclear reactions in the sun. Upon escaping and decaying into photons they would provide a signal in the 3"-rayspectrum of the quiet sun, for which only low upper limits exist observationally. A favorable reaction, occurring frequently in the main solar reaction chain, is p + d ~ 3He + 3" (5.5 MeV), where the new particle could be substituted for the photon. Taking the "standard axion" as an example, we find that it is ruled out for values of the axion parameter X between 0.31 and 3.0, in the middle of this range by many orders of magnitude. We suggest that an effective way to search for new particles of this sort is to look for a step in the solar 3"ray spectrum at 5.5 MeV. Among the many speculations in recent years concerning possible new particles, one often finds nonstrongly interacting light neutral bosons. In addition to direct search for such particles in the laboratory, one can set limits on their possible existence, or perhaps find evidence for it, by cosmological or astrophysical arguments [ 1]. Such particles would be produced in large numbers from the thermal energy in the interior of stars. Limits on the particle's properties may be set by the requirement that their escaping flux from the stellar interior does not carry away so much energy so as to upset the observed stages of stellar evolution. This kind of argument is effective when the mass of the particle in question is not much bigger than the typical thermal energy k T in the star. In this case electrodynamic processes, particularly 3' + e -+ e + a (we call the new boson "a") are particularly efficient at producing the new object, and this method has been used to set good limits [2] * 1. Another possibility to set limits is to look for the 3" rays resulting from the decay of the new boson as it i Based on work to be submitted as a thesis for the "Diplom" degree at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universit~it,Munich, Fed. Rep. Germany. :~1 Limits on the "standard" and the "invisible" axion have been set in ref. [3] using astrophysical methods. 0 031-9163/82/0000--0000/$02.75 © 1982 North-Holland leaves the star, especially the sun [2]. Since 3' rays from the quiet sun are rare, this method will be sensitive to even relatively low fluxes of new particles. Furthermore, restriction to very light masses is not necessary if we consider production in nuclear reactions in the center of the star, where MeV energies are involved. In this note, then, we consider what can be learned by looking for 3' rays coming from neutral bosons produced in nuclear reactions in the sun. We exemplify our approach by considering the "standard axion" and find that it is ruled out by many orders of magnitude when its mass is less that about 265 keV, or lifetime more than 5.3 ms. The "standard axion" is a light, neutral pseudoscalar particle characterized by a parameter X giving the mass and lifetime through m a ~ 75(X + X - 1) keV, r ~ 0.7 keV/ma)5 s, if standard values are assumed for the number of generations of quarks and leptons, N = 3, and the mass ratio of the up to the down quark, Z = 0.56 [4,5]. For a value o f X = 0.43 -+ 0.05 [6] ,2 we would have m a ~ 200 keV, r ~ 20 ms and an axion with 5.5 MeV energy, due to the large relativistic time dilation Ea/m a ~ 27 would travel about 0.2 R~ (solar radii) before decaying. Since the boson in many ways resembles a photon, ~:2 Faissner [7] informs us that a now preferred second solution is rn -~-200 keV, r ~ 20 ms, X = 0.43 -+ 0.05. 323 Volume 119B, number 4,5,6 PHYSICS LETTERS it can be emitted in nuclear reactions in the place o f a photon [8]. For the pseudoscalar axion, the coupling to nucleons is through the spin o p e r a t o r a , so that it will be principally coupled to magnetic transitions. Donnelly et al. [4] find for the relative emission rate of axions to photons for spin-operator dominated M1transitions 23/30 December 1982 The factor 1/2 reflects the two possibilities for the 3' polarization, a a [ a ~ 2.33X 10 - 4 is the relative coupling strength, k a and k are the axion and 3' momenta, and p and/~ "magnetic m o m e n t " factors for the axion and photon. For isovector transitions, as we need them below, they are p(1) ~ 0 . 1 5 X - 1.85/X,/~(1) =/aP - / ~ n ~ 4.71 [4] so that I'a/r'. r ~ 1 0 - 4 - 1 0 - 5 with a narrow dip to zero at X ~ 3.46, where the axion coupling becomes completely isoscalar. The sun is believed to produce energy practically totally by conversion of hydrogen into helium, viz. the effective reaction p-wave-capture) at the relevant energy, 25 keV [ 10]. From a detailed calculation [ 11 ] this M 1 transition is believed to be predominantly isovector. Thus at X = 0.43, for example we find from (1) Pa/FyM1 ~ 0.9 X 10 - 4 or I ' a / P ~ total ~ 2.9 X 10 - 5 , which would give 5.0 X 1033 axions per second. If the axions did not decay or were not reabsorbed in the sun, this would give 1.8 X 106 axions/cm 2 s at the earth. The variation o f the production rate with X is plotted in fig. 1. curve (a): The dip at X = 3.46 results from the axion becoming pure isoscalar; in reality it would presumably be filled in somwhat by contributions from various isoscalar reactions. Of other important reactions in the PP-chain, 4He + 3He -+ 7Be + 7(1.6 MeV) is E1 [12] and therefore not capable of producing axions. 7*Li ~ 7Li + 7 (0.48 MeV) is measured to be at least 55% M1 [13] and is believed to be a proton spin-flip transition [12,14[. It is, however, of low energy and less frequent than (3). The annihilation of positrons arising from the PP-chain, e + + e - -+ 7 + a, has the branching ratio [15] 4p + 2 e - ~ 4He + 2~ + 7's + recoil energy . Ya.,//I'2.r ~ ~ ( a a / a ) [1 - ¼(ma/me) 2 ] ra/r~ ~ ~ ( a a / a ) (kJk)3(p/la) 2 1 (1) (2) The total energy release of (2) in v's, 3"s and recoil energy is about 26.7 MeV of which about 0.6 MeV is carried away by the neutrinos. Reaction (2) may proceed through various chains and cycles. We concentrate on the presumably dominant reaction chains PPI and PPII, which contribute about 99% to the total o f ( 2 ) , 3 , and neglect PPIII and the CNO tricycle. In the PP chains a favorable reaction exists, namely the deuteron-proton-fusion p + d ~ 3He + 3' (5.5 M e V ) . (3) This reaction occurs 1.87 times for every a-particle produced by (2), when the PP-chain is assumed to terminate in 87% of all cases via PPI, in 13% via PPII [9]. The luminosity of the sun, 2.4 X 1039 MeV/s corresponds from (2) to the production o f 0.92 × 1038 aparticles per second and therefore to 1.7 X 1038 reactions o f type (3) per second. To estimate in what fraction o f (3) an axion is produced we use the fact that the M1 (s-wave-capture) cross section is measured to be (1.3 +- 0.3) X 10 - 3 2 cm 2 (as against (2.9 -+ 0.3) X 10 - 3 2 cm 2 for the E l , ,a BahcaU and Sears [9] : Solar terminations: 86% PPI, 14% PPII, BahcaU [9] : 87%, 13%. 324 With the relative coupling constant to electrons % / a 4.6 X 1 0 - 1 t / x 2 [4] this process gives only a small yield in axions as compared to (3). The " C o m p t o n " process 3' + e -+ e + a with MeV ~/'s, such as from (3), . 1034 . . . . . . . i , , , , , , , , (AI TOTAL PRODUCTION 1 032 LU u~ 1030 Z '~x 1 028 1 0 26 lO 2, 0.1 J ....... ii 1 . . . . . . 10 XAXmN Fig. 1. Constraint on the axion parameter X from solar "r-rayastronomy. (A) Axion flux from the sun, due to p + d ~ 3He + a, when axions do not decay and are not reabsorbed in the sun. (B) Axion flux from the sun if the effects of fig. 1 are considered. (C) Experimental upper limit from observation of the -/-ray-flux from the quiet sun. Volume 119B, number 4,5,6 PHYSICS LETTERS 16~° t "-LY - I0 a8 0.1 I 10 XAXION Fig. 2. Absorption cross sections for axions. The curves are marked with the name of the target and refer to the following processes: (017) a + 170 ~ 160 + n (neutron-transition). (C13) a + 13C ~ 12C + n (neutron-transition). (He3) a + 3He --*d + p (isovector-transition). (e) a + e ~ e + 3' ("Compton"process, "Primakoff"-process negligible). (p) a + p ~ p + 3' (Primakoff"-process; "Compton"-process roughly same magnitude). Multiply with Z 2 of target nucleus to obtain the Primakoff cross section for any nucleus. is governed by the same small coupling constant and thus also gives a small axion yield. The "Primakoff" production 3' + (nucleus or electron) -~ (nucleus or electron) + a from the same 3"s is completely negligible. We now turn to the absorption of the axion leaving the nuclear active region of the sun. A particle originating in the center of the sun must pass through roughly 0.7 X 1036 electrons/cm 2, 0.5 × 1036 protons/cm 2 and 0.1 X 1036 alpha-particles/cm 2 to reach the surface. Thus an absorption process will be considered unimportant if the number abundance of a species of target relative to hydrogen times its axion absorption cross section is estimated to be less than about 10-36 cm 2. In fig. 2 we show estimates of cross sections for various possibly significant processes at E a = 5.5 MeV. The largest type of absorption cross section is the analog of photo dissociation, a + nucleus -+ nuclear fragments. However, among the nuclei present in the sun only a few have a few dissociation threshold below 5.5 MeV. The three cases shown 170, 13C and 3He, are potentially interesting since they are made in nuclear reaction chains and could be more frequent than indicated by their primordial abundance, while deuterons are believed to be very rare in the high density areas of the sun due to the rapid reaction (3). We estimate the dissociation cross sections from photo dis- 23/30 December 1982 sociation data , 4 scaled according to the formulas of ref. [4], assuming pure Ml-transitions for 170 and 13C to give a generous upper limit. For definiteness, we assume that the isospin structure of the 170 and 13C dissociation is that of a neutron transition. The relative abundance of the three species exhibits a strong radial dependence in the sun. With estimated maximum values of 1 X 10 - 3 (3He) and 4 X 10 - 5 (13C) and much smaller average values [ 18], the axion dissociation of 13C and 3He are unimportant. For 170, a detailed calculation using the production process 160 (p, "y) 17F (e+v)170 *s and assuming the 170 has accumulated during 4.5 × 109 yr gives a maximum abundance of about 10 - 4 at the center of the sun and much less further out. If the axion flux is assumed to be reduced only by 170 absorption, the escape probability in a particular solar model [2] is plotted in fig. 3 curve (A). Other solar models yield similar results [21,221. For the Primakoff process on nuclei we use the :t:4 For 13C(3", n) 12C, see ref. [16], For 170(3", n) 160, see ref. [17] :~s For the reaction rate of 160 (p, 3') 17F see ref. [19]. . . . . . . . . i 1 -2 lO 16 6 -10 10 0.1 , i LillJ i 1 , , ,,, lO XAXiON Fig. 3. Probability for axions (Ea = 5.5 MeV) to escape from the sun, averaged over the radial distribution of the axion-production rate in the sun. We use the detailed model of Sears [20]. The four curves show the probability for escape if axions are absorbed by: (A) Only a + ZTO~ 160 + n. (B) Only a + e- -, e- ÷ 3". (C) Only a ~ 23' (decay). Here we assume that all axions are produced in the center of the sun: escape probability = exp(-R®/l), 1 = mean distance of flight for axions of 5.5 MeV: (D) Effects (A), (B) and decay with an integration over the sun according to ref. [120]. 325 Volume 119B, number 4,5,6 PHYSICS LETTERS cross section formula of ref. [23] which is in essential agreement with a recent estimate of the same cross section in ref. [24]. The cross section scales with Z 2 of the target nucleus, but this rise in cross section is more than balanced by the decrease in abundance for heavy nuclei [25]. Consequently, the Primakoff effect is not important. The dominant absorption process is then the "Compton" like electron scattering, a + e ~ e + 3', which has the cross section at E a = 5.5 MeV of o = 1.8 X 10 -36 cm 2 1IX 2 ,4. The reduction of the flux due to this process is shown in fig. 3 curve (B) as a function of X. We now consider decay of the axion. For orientation, fig. 3 curve (C) shows the reduction in the 5.5 MeV axion flux using exp(-Ro/l), l = [(Ea/ma) 2 - I ] 1/2r assuming that all axions come from the solar center. Using the solar model [20] and considering absorption by 170, electrons and decay, and assuming that the axion production is radially distributed like the solar energy generation, we obtain fig. 3 curve (D). We see that the naive lifetime estimate gives the dominant effect for the loss of the axion fluz. We find that varying the solar model has small effects on the results. At the steep part of the curve, X = 0.3, the variation among three models [ 2 0 - 2 2 ] is less than a factor two and a t X = 1 about 10%. Now, multiplying the number of axions produced per second in the sun with the probability for escape [fig. 3 curve (D)] we obtain the axion flux leaving the sun as shown in fig. 1 curve (B). For the lifetimes considered here, all axions decay into two 3"s before reaching the earth. Since we have monoenergetic axions the energy distribution of the 7's is a box-shaped spectrum with 0 ~<Ev ~< 5.5 MeV. The best upper limits for 3' rays from the quiet sun, as far as we know, are from balloon observations in 1966 [26]. The upper limits decrease with energy, reaching 0.8 X 1 0 - 3 / c m 2 s MeV between 4 and 6 MeV. Taking this to be the upper limit for the height of the " b o x " we thus infer an experimental upper bound of 6.2 X 1024 axions/s leaving the sun [fig. 1 curve (C)]. We conclude that axions with 0.31 < X < 3.0 are excluded. Recent laboratory results obtained by looking for axions from nuclear de-excitations have also set excel,4 This is essentially the cross section of ref. [4]. Their formula (25), however, appears to be misprinted: Their first factor 2 has to be cancelled. 326 23/30 December 1982 lent limits for the nonexistence of the axion [27,14] which now appears to be ruled out. Independent of the question of the axion, we can say that a particle produced at a rate r compared to the photon in reaction (3) and with an escape probability p (decay and absorption), must obey r.p < 10 -14 , (4) assuming it decays into ~, rays on the way to the earth. We would like to stress therefore that 3' rays from the quiet sun are an interesting method for searching for new particles. In particular reaction (3) gives monoenergetic particles (5.5 MeV) and being both M1 and E1 can couple to particles of various s p i n parity. Due to the frequent occurrence of (3) compared to any other reaction giving particles of comparable energy, the resulting simple " b o x " 3' ray spectrum should dominate for a wide range of the hypothetical particle's parameters. Thus solar 3, ray searches should look for a step in the 3' ray spectrum from the quiet sun at 5.5 MeV. The existing data still appears to be well above the level expected from backgrounds such as that from cosmic rays hitting the sun and there is room for further improvement in the observations. Should such a particle exist, 3' ray observations would provide a beautiful way to study the interior of the sun. We thank R.D. Peccei for many helpful discussions on the subject and M. Yoshimura for discussions of previous work. Furthermore, we are indebted to C. Reppin, E. Rieger, H.-C. Thomas and K. yon Sengbusch for their help on questions of astrophysics and 3' ray astronomy. We thank. H. Soenke for his help in overcoming the whims of the computer. One of us (G.R.) acknowledges financial assistance from his parents and the Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes during the course of this investigation. References [1] For a review, see: A.D. Dolgov, Ya.B. Zeldovich, Rev. Mod. Phys. 53 (1981) 1. [2] K. Sata and H. Sato, Prog. Theor. Phys. 54 (1975) 1564. [3] K.O. Mikaelian, Phys. Rev. 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