27–30 Jul 2021
Zoom / Gather.town
America/New_York timezone

Superradiance of self-interacting scalar fields

30 Jul 2021, 10:00
30m
Zoom / Gather.town

Zoom / Gather.town

Speaker

Marios Galanis (Stanford University)

Description

Black hole superradiance is a powerful probe of light, weakly-coupled hidden sector particles. Particles with a Compton wavelength comparable to the black hole’s radius lead to an instability, extracting mass and angular momentum from the black hole. Many ultralight candidates, such as axions, generically have self-interactions that can influence the evolution of the superradiant instability.  Self-interactions lead to energy exchange between 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 talk, I will review the basic aspects of black hole superradiance and give a qualitative picture of how it changes when quartic self-interactions are present. Finally, I will discuss possible signatures, which include coherent, monochromatic gravitational and axion waves that can be probed in current or future experiments.

Primary author

Marios Galanis (Stanford University)

Presentation materials