4 September 2020 to 2 October 2020
Europe/Athens timezone
After the physical conference, an internet only session took place 1 and 2 October 2020. This program appears in the timetable as well.

Updated Constraints on Asteroid-Mass Primordial Black Holes as Dark Matter

1 Oct 2020, 18:15
25m
Room 2

Room 2

Talk Workshop on New physics paradigms after Higgs and gravitational wave discoveries Workshop on New physics paradigms after Higgs and gravitational wave discoveries

Speaker

Nolan Smyth (University of California, Santa Cruz)

Description

Microlensing of stars places significant constraints on sub-planetary mass compact objects, including primordial black holes, as dark matter candidates. However, when the Einstein radius of the lens in the source plane is smaller than the size of the light source, amplification is strongly suppressed, making it difficult to constrain lenses with a mass below ~10^{-10} solar masses, i.e. asteroid-mass objects. Current constraints using Subaru HSC observations of M31 assume a fixed source size of one solar radius. We correct the HSC constraints by constructing a source size distribution based on the M31 PHAT survey and on a synthetic stellar catalogue, and by correspondingly weighing the finite-size source effects. We find that the actual HSC constraints are weaker by up to almost three orders of magnitude in some cases, broadening the range of masses for which primordial black holes can be the totality of the cosmological dark matter by almost one order of magnitude.

Details

N/A

Is this abstract from experiment? No
Name of experiment and experimental site N/A
Is the speaker for that presentation defined? No
Internet talk Yes

Authors

Nolan Smyth (University of California, Santa Cruz) Stefano Profumo (University of California, Santa Cruz) Tesla Jeltema (University of California, Santa Cruz) Prof. Puraga Guha Thakurta (University of California, Santa Cruz) Mr Kevin McKinnon (University of California, Santa Cruz) Mr English Samuel (University of California, Santa Cruz)

Presentation materials