Microlensing-Based Estimate of the Mass Fraction in Compact Objects in Lens
E. Mediavilla, J.A. Munoz, E. Falco, V. Motta, E. Guerras, H. Canovas,, C. Jean, A. Oscoz, A.M. Mosquera

TL;DR
This study uses quasar microlensing data to estimate the fraction of mass in compact objects within lens galaxies, finding it to be very low, supporting the hypothesis of minimal MACHO presence.
Contribution
It provides a novel estimate of the mass fraction in compact objects in lens galaxies using microlensing data and simulations, with implications for dark matter composition.
Findings
Estimated mass fraction in compact objects is about 5%.
Results support a very low MACHO content in galaxy halos.
Microlensing measurements are consistent with low compact object abundance.
Abstract
We estimate the fraction of mass that is composed of compact objects in gravitational lens galaxies. This study is based on microlensing measurements (obtained from the literature) of a sample of 29 quasar image pairs seen through 20 lens galaxies. We determine the baseline for no microlensing magnification between two images from the ratios of emission line fluxes. Relative to this baseline, the ratio between the continua of the two images gives the difference in microlensing magnification. The histogram of observed microlensing events peaks close to no magnification and is concentrated below 0.6 magnitudes, although two events of high magnification, , are also present. We study the likelihood of the microlensing measurements using frequency distributions obtained from simulated microlensing magnification maps for different values of the fraction of mass in compact…
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