New constraints on the primordial black hole number density from Galactic gamma-ray astronomy
R. Lehoucq, M. Casse, J.-M. Casandjian, I. Grenier

TL;DR
This paper establishes new, more stringent limits on the abundance of primordial black holes in the galaxy by analyzing gamma-ray data, impacting theories of early universe structure formation.
Contribution
It introduces a novel method using galactic gamma-ray observations to constrain primordial black hole density, improving upon previous extragalactic background limits.
Findings
Derived upper limits on primordial black hole density in the Milky Way.
Found bounds more stringent than previous gamma-ray background constraints.
Implications for small-scale density fluctuations from inflation.
Abstract
Primordial black holes are unique probes of cosmology, general relativity, quantum gravity and non standard particle physics. They can be considered as the ultimate particle accelerator in their last (explosive) moments since they are supposed to reach, very briefly, the Planck temperature. Upper limits on the primordial black hole number density of mass g, the Hawking mass (born in the big-bang terminating their life presently), is determined comparing their predicted cumulative -ray emission, galaxy-wise, to the one observed by the EGRET satellite, once corrected for non thermal -ray background emission induced by cosmic ray protons and electrons interacting with light and matter in the Milky Way. A model with free gas emissivities is used to map the Galaxy in the 100 MeV photon range, where the peak of the primordial black hole emission is…
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