Abstract

Black hole superradiance is a powerful probe of light, weakly-coupled hidden sector particles. Many candidate particles, such as axions, generically have self-interactions that can influence the evolution of the superradiant instability. As pointed out in arXiv:1604.06422 in the context of a toy model, much of the existing literature on spin-0 superradiance does not take into account the most important self-interaction-induced processes. These processes lead to energy exchange between quasi-bound levels and particle emission to infinity; for large self-couplings, superradiant growth is saturated at a quasi-equilibrium configuration of reduced level occupation numbers. In this paper, we perform a detailed analysis of the rich dynamics of spin-0 superradiance with self-interactions, and the resulting observational signatures. We focus on quartic self-interactions, which dominate the evolution for most models of interest. We explore multiple distinct regimes of parameter space introduced by a non-zero self-interaction, including the simultaneous population of two or more bound levels; at large coupling, we confirm the basic picture of quasi-equilibrium saturation and provide evidence that the "bosenova" collapse does not occur in most of the astrophysical parameter space. Compared to gravitational superradiance, we find that gravitational wave "annihilation" signals and black hole spin-down are parametrically suppressed with increasing interactions, while new gravitational wave "transition" signals can take place for moderate interactions. The novel phenomenon of scalar wave emission is less suppressed at large couplings, and if the particle has Standard Model interactions, then coherent, monochromatic axion wave signals from black hole superradiance may be detectable in proposed axion dark matter experiments.

Highlights

  • As discovered by Penrose [1], it is possible to extract energy and angular momentum from rotating black holes

  • We find that over a large range of parameter space of interest to light axion models, the addition of a quartic coupling leads to rich dynamics in the evolution of the superradiant instability, and new observational consequences

  • We provide evidence that during evolution from astrophysical initial conditions, a “bosenova” does not occur in much of the phenomenologically relevant parameter space: scalar field values remain small and the cloud size required for collapse is not reached

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

As discovered by Penrose [1], it is possible to extract energy and angular momentum from rotating black holes. We find that over a large range of parameter space of interest to light axion models, the addition of a quartic coupling leads to rich dynamics in the evolution of the superradiant instability, and new observational consequences These dynamics include limiting the maximum number of particles in a bound level, populating levels inaccessible through gravitational superradiance alone, saturation to quasiequilibrium configurations of two or more levels, and emission of nonrelativistic and relativistic scalar waves to infinity.

SPIN-0 SUPERRADIANCE
QUARTIC SELF-INTERACTIONS
Relativistic scalar emission
Nonrelativistic scalar emission
Bound state interactions
Cubic couplings
Summary
PERTURBATIVE EVOLUTION
Evolution of occupation numbers
Two-level system
Evolution equations
Small self-coupling
Moderate self-coupling
Large self-coupling: lack of BH spindown
Beyond the two-level system
Growth mechanisms in the presence of self-interactions
Other levels
NONPERTURBATIVE BEHAVIOR
Maximum field amplitude
Bosenova
Subleading effects
Comparison to simulations
Repulsive self-interactions
BLACK HOLE SPIN-DOWN
Axion models
GRAVITATIONAL WAVES
Annihilations
Additional annihilation channels
Annihilation signals from complex fields
Transitions
Frequency drifts
VIII. AXION WAVES
Nucleon spin coupling
Photon coupling
CONCLUSIONS
Frequency corrections
Nonrelativistic emission
Relativistic emission
Selection rules for mixing with damped states
Large self-coupling
T 22 ðω ω0Þ2
Full Text
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