6–8 May 2019
University of Pittsburgh
US/Eastern timezone

Microlensing of X-ray Pulsars: a Method to Detect Primordial Black Hole Dark Matter

7 May 2019, 17:15
15m
205 (Lawrence Hall)

205

Lawrence Hall

parallel talk DM IV

Speaker

Dr Nicholas Orlofsky (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Description

Primordial black holes (PBHs) with a mass from $10^{-16}$ to $10^{-11}\,M_\odot$ may comprise 100% of dark matter. Due to a combination of wave and finite source size effects, the traditional microlensing of stars does not probe this mass range. In this talk, we point out that X-ray pulsars with higher photon energies and smaller source sizes are good candidate sources for microlensing for this mass window. Among the existing X-ray pulsars, the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC) X-1 source is found to be the best candidate because of its apparent brightness and long distance from telescopes. We have analyzed the existing observation data of SMC X-1 by the RXTE telescope (around 10 days) and found that PBH as 100% of dark matter is close to but not yet excluded. Future longer observation of this source by X-ray telescopes with larger effective areas such as AstroSat, Athena, Lynx, and eXTP can potentially close the last mass window where PBHs can make up all of dark matter.

Author

Dr Nicholas Orlofsky (University of Wisconsin-Madison)

Co-author

Yang Bai (University of Wisconsin, Madison)

Presentation materials