The end of the MACHO era- revisited: new limits on MACHO masses from halo wide binaries
Miguel A. Monroy-Rodr\'iguez, Christine Allen

TL;DR
This study uses halo wide binaries and Monte Carlo simulations to set upper limits on MACHO masses, strongly suggesting they do not constitute dark matter in the galactic halo.
Contribution
It provides the most reliable upper bounds on MACHO masses using an improved binary catalog and galactic orbit analysis, refining previous constraints.
Findings
Maximum MACHO mass is less than 112 solar masses using the full sample.
Refined upper limit of 21-68 solar masses for the most halo-like binaries.
Upper limit approaches less than 5 solar masses when considering binaries with minimal disk interaction.
Abstract
In order to determine an upper bound for the mass of the massive compact halo objets (MACHOs) we use the halo binaries contained in a recent catalog (Allen \& Monroy-Rodr\'{\i}guez 2013). To dynamically model their interactions with massive perturbers a Monte Carlo simulation is conducted, using an impulsive approximation method and assuming a galactic halo constituted by massive particles of a characteristic mass. The results of such simulations are compared with several subsamples of our improved catalog of candidate halo wide binaries. In accordance with Quinn et al. (2009) we also find our results to be very sensitive to the widest binaries. However, our larger sample, together with the fact that we can obtain galactic orbits for 150 of our systems, allows a more reliable estimate of the maximum MACHO mass than that obtained previously. If we employ the entire sample of 211…
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