Matching microlensing events with X-ray sources
N. Sartore, A. Treves

TL;DR
This study cross-matched microlensing events with X-ray sources to identify potential isolated black holes or neutron stars, finding a promising candidate but highlighting the challenges in confirming such objects.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed cross-correlation of microlensing events with X-ray sources, focusing on long-duration events likely caused by compact objects.
Findings
One candidate match found with a potential black hole signature.
The candidate shows a hard X-ray spectrum and positional coincidence.
Uncertainties prevent definitive identification of the lens as a black hole.
Abstract
The detection of old neutron stars and black holes in isolation is one of the cornerstones of compact object astrophysics. Microlensing surveys may help on this purpose since the lensing mechanism is independent of the emission properties of the lens. Indeed, several black hole candidates deriving through microlensing observations have been reported in the literature. The identification of counterparts, especially in the X-rays, would be a strong argument in favor of the compact nature of these lenses. We perform a cross-correlation between the catalogs of microlensing events by the OGLE, MACHO and MOA teams, and those of X-rays sources from XMM-Newton and Chandra satellites. Based on our previous work, we select only microlensing events longer than 100 days, which should contain a large fraction of lenses as compact objects. Our matching criterion takes into account the positional…
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