The CERN Axion Solar Telescope (CAST) has been in operation and taking data since 2003. The main objective of the CAST experiment is to search for a hypothetical pseudoscalar boson, the axion, which might be produced in the core of the sun. The basic physics process CAST is based on is the time inverted Primakoff effect, by which an axion can be converted into a detectable photon in an external electromagnetic field. The resulting x-ray photons are expected to be thermally distributed between 1 and 7 keV. The most sensitive detector system of CAST is a pn-CCD detector combined with a Wolter I type x-ray mirror system. With the x-ray telescope of CAST a background reduction of more than 2 orders of magnitude is achieved, such that for the first time the axion photon coupling constant gaγγ can be probed beyond the best astrophysical constraints gaγγ < 1 × 10 -10 GeV-1. © IOP Publishing Ltd and Deutsche Physikalische Gesellschaft.
CITATION STYLE
Kuster, M., Bräuninger, H., Cebrián, S., Davenport, M., Eleftheriadis, C., Englhauser, J., … Zioutas, K. (2007). The x-ray telescope of CAST. New Journal of Physics, 9. https://doi.org/10.1088/1367-2630/9/6/169
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