Discriminating power of milli-lensing observations for dark matter models
Nick Loudas, Vasiliki Pavlidou, Carolina Casadio, Kostas Tassis

TL;DR
This paper assesses how different dark matter models influence the likelihood of milli-lensing events on sub-galactic scales, aiming to distinguish between models through observational signatures.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytical framework to compare milli-lensing probabilities across cold, warm, and self-interacting dark matter models using halo mass functions and density profiles.
Findings
Warm DM haloes are too diffuse to cause lensing.
CDM haloes may produce lensing depending on concentration.
Self-interacting DM requires gravothermal collapse for effective lensing.
Abstract
The nature of dark matter (DM) is still under intense debate. Sub-galactic scales are particularly critical, as different, currently viable DM models make diverse predictions on the expected abundance and density profile of DM haloes on these scales. We investigate the ability of sub-galactic DM haloes to act as strong lenses on background compact sources, producing gravitational lensing events on milli-arcsecond scales (milli-lenses), for different DM models. For each DM scenario, we explore whether a sample of 5000 distant sources is sufficient to detect at least one milli-lens. We develop a semi-analytical model to estimate the milli-lensing optical depth as a function of the source's redshift for various DM models. We employ the Press-Schechter formalism, as well as results from recent N-body simulations to compute the halo mass function, taking into account the appropriate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing
