Electromagnetic probes of primordial black holes as dark matter
Y. Ali-Haimoud, S. Clesse, J. Garcia-Bellido, A. Kashlinsky, L., Wyrzykowski, A. Achucarro, L. Amendola, J. Annis, A. Arbey, R. G. Arendt, F., Atrio-Barandela, N. Bellomo, K. Belotsky, J-L. Bernal, S. Bird, V. Bozza, C., Byrnes, S. Calchi Novati, F. Calore, B. J. Carr, J. Chluba

TL;DR
This paper reviews electromagnetic observational strategies and theoretical efforts planned for the 2020s to determine if primordial black holes could account for dark matter, leveraging new instruments and data analysis methods.
Contribution
It outlines a comprehensive, multi-faceted approach combining upcoming electromagnetic observations and theoretical modeling to test the primordial black hole dark matter hypothesis.
Findings
Next-generation telescopes will improve CIB and CXB measurements.
Microlensing surveys will enhance detection of Galactic Halo black holes.
Supernova lensing observations will provide additional constraints.
Abstract
The LIGO discoveries have rekindled suggestions that primordial black holes (BHs) may constitute part to all of the dark matter (DM) in the Universe. Such suggestions came from 1) the observed merger rate of the BHs, 2) their unusual masses, 3) their low/zero spins, and 4) also from the independently uncovered cosmic infrared background (CIB) fluctuations signal of high amplitude and coherence with unresolved cosmic X-ray background (CXB). Here we summarize the prospects to resolve this important issue with electromagnetic observations using the instruments and tools expected in the 2020's. These prospects appear promising to make significant, and potentially critical, advances. We demonstrate that in the next decade, new space- and ground-borne electromagnetic instruments, combined with concurrent theoretical efforts, should shed critical light on the long-considered link between…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Dark Matter and Cosmic Phenomena
