The abundance of clustered primordial black holes from quasar microlensing
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Heydenreich, Sven; Mediavilla, Evencio; Jiménez Vicente, Jorge; Vives-Arias, Héctor; Muñoz, Jose A.Editorial
EDP Sciences
Materia
cosmology: observations dark matter early Universe
Fecha
2024-10-17Referencia bibliográfica
Heydenreich, S. et. al. A&A, 690, A307 (2024). [https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202449216]
Patrocinador
Grants PID2020-118687GB-C31, PID2020-118687GB-C32, and PID2020-118687GBC33, financed by the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación through MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033; Project FQM-108 financed by Junta de Andalucía; Grant PTA2021- 020561-I, funded by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and by ESF+; German Research Foundation (DFG SCHN 342/13); UC Santa Cruz, funded by NSF MRI grant AST 1828315Resumen
While elementary particles are the favored candidate for the elusive dark matter, primordial black holes (PBHs) have also been considered
to fill that role. Gravitational microlensing is a very well-suited tool to detect and measure the abundance of compact objects in
galaxies. Previous studies based on quasar microlensing exclude a significant presence of substellar to intermediate-mass black holes
(BHs; ≲100 M⊙). However, these studies were based on a spatially uniform distribution of BHs while, according to current theories of
PBH formation, they are expected to appear in clusters. We study the impact of clustering in microlensing flux magnification, finding
that at large scales clusters act like giant pseudo-particles, strongly affecting the emission coming from the broad-line region, which
can no longer be used to define the zero microlensing baseline. As an alternative, we set this baseline from the intrinsic magnification
ratios of quasar images predicted by macro lens models and compared them with the observed flux ratios in emission lines, infrared,
and radio. The (magnitude) differences are the flux-ratio anomalies attributable to microlensing, which we estimate for 35 image pairs
corresponding to 12 lens systems. A Bayesian analysis indicates that the observed anomalies are incompatible with the existence of
a significant population of clustered PBHs. Furthermore, we find that more compact clusters exhibit a stronger microlensing impact.
Consequently, we conclude that clustering makes the existence of a significant population of BHs in the substellar to intermediate mass
range even more unlikely.