AMPM survey detects one microlensing candidate in LMC data and constrains up to 30% of Galactic primordial black hole dark matter at 95% C.L. in the asteroid-to-planetary mass range, with peak sensitivity shifted to lunar masses by second-order effects.
Improved Theoretical Predictions of Microlensing Rates for the Detection of Primordial Black Hole Dark Matter
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abstract
Primordial Black Holes (PBHs) remain a Dark Matter (DM) candidate of the Standard Model of Particle Physics. Previously, we proposed a new method of constraining the remaining PBH DM mass range using microlensing of stars monitored by NASA's Kepler mission. We improve this analysis using a more accurate treatment of the population of the Kepler source stars, their variability and limb-darkening. We extend the theoretically detectable PBH DM mass range down to $2\times10^{-10} M_\sun$, two orders of magnitude below current limits and one third order of magnitude below our previous estimate. We address how to extract the DM properties such as mass and spatial distribution if PBH microlensing events were detected. We correct an error in a well-known finite-source limb-darkening microlensing formula and also examine the effects of varying the light curve cadence on PBH DM detectability. We also introduce an approximation for estimating the predicted rate of detection per star as a function of the star's properties, thus allowing for selection of source stars in future missions, and extend our analysis to planned surveys, such as WFIRST.
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Stellar microlensing surveys exclude compact objects between 10^{-11} and 10^4 solar masses from making up all dark matter under standard assumptions.
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AMPM I. A Targeted Search for Asteroid Mass Primordial Black Hole Microlenses
AMPM survey detects one microlensing candidate in LMC data and constrains up to 30% of Galactic primordial black hole dark matter at 95% C.L. in the asteroid-to-planetary mass range, with peak sensitivity shifted to lunar masses by second-order effects.
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Stellar microlensing surveys as a probe of Primordial Black Holes: status and prospects
Stellar microlensing surveys exclude compact objects between 10^{-11} and 10^4 solar masses from making up all dark matter under standard assumptions.