Understanding caustic crossings in giant arcs: characteristic scales, event rates, and constraints on compact dark matter
Masamune Oguri, Jose M. Diego, Nick Kaiser, Patrick L. Kelly, Tom, Broadhurst

TL;DR
This paper models microlensing caustic crossing events in giant arcs to constrain the properties of lensing objects and dark matter, using a recent event to derive limits on lens mass and source size.
Contribution
It provides an analytic framework for interpreting caustic crossing events to constrain compact dark matter models and lens properties.
Findings
Lens mass range constrained to 0.1-4000 solar masses.
Source star radius estimated between 40-260 solar radii.
High fractional dark matter densities in certain mass ranges are inconsistent with observations.
Abstract
The recent discovery of fast transient events near critical curves of massive galaxy clusters, which are interpreted as highly magnified individual stars in giant arcs due to caustic crossing, opens up the possibility of using such microlensing events to constrain a range of dark matter models such as primordial black holes and scalar field dark matter. Based on a simple analytic model, we study lensing properties of a point mass lens embedded in a high magnification region, and derive the dependence of the peak brightness, microlensing time scales, and event rates on the mass of the point mass lens as well as the radius of a source star that is magnified. We find that the lens mass and source radius of the first event MACS J1149 Lensed Star 1 (LS1) are constrained, with the lens mass range of and the source radius range of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
