13–17 May 2024
University of Pittsburgh / Carnegie Mellon University
US/Eastern timezone

Feedback in the dark: a critical examination of CMB bounds on primordial black holes

15 May 2024, 14:15
15m
David Lawrence Hall 120 (University of Pittsburgh)

David Lawrence Hall 120

University of Pittsburgh

Dark Matter Dark Matter

Speaker

Gregory Suczewski

Description

If present in the early universe, primordial black holes (PBHs) will accrete matter and emit high-energy photons, altering the statistical properties of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). This mechanism has been used to constrain the fraction of dark matter that is in the form of PBHs to be much smaller than unity for PBH masses well above one solar mass. Moreover, the presence of dense dark matter mini-halos around the PBHs has been used to set even more stringent constraints, as these would boost the accretion rates. In this work, we critically revisit CMB constraints on PBHs taking into account the role of the local ionization of the gas around them. We discuss how the local increase in temperature around PBHs can prevent the dark matter mini-halos from strongly enhancing the accretion process, in some cases significantly weakening previously derived CMB constraints. We explore in detail the key ingredients of the CMB bound and derive a conservative limit on the cosmological abundance of massive PBHs.

Author

Co-authors

Dominic Agius (Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular (IFIC), Universidad de Valencia) Prof. Rouven Essig (Stony Brook University) Daniele Gaggero (Pisa University) Francesca Scarcella (Laboratoire Univers et Particules de Montpellier (LUPM)) Mauro Valli (INFN Sezione di Roma)

Presentation materials