Probing for primordial black hole candidates in exoplanet search data
Paul Halpern, Erik Cauley, Max Stoltzmann, and Mauritz Wilshusen

TL;DR
This study analyzes exoplanet search data to identify potential primordial black hole candidates by distinguishing them from planets using radial velocity and microlensing observations.
Contribution
It introduces a method to identify PBH candidates in existing exoplanet data by ruling out planetary characteristics through imaging and transit analysis.
Findings
Identified potential PBH candidates among radial velocity and microlensing data.
Highlighted specific objects and events as promising PBH contenders.
Suggested future imaging to confirm the nature of these candidates.
Abstract
We have sifted through astrophysical data collected by various radial velocity and gravitational microlensing searches for exoplanets with the goal of identifying potential signs of the presence of primordial black holes (PBH). Our motivation is that those hypothesized remnants of inhomogeneous energetic fluctuations in the early universe, though too small for direct detection, are thought to have a mass range similar to that of planets. Thereby, if captured by stars, they could conceivably make their presence known through stellar wobbles picked up by means of Doppler spectroscopy in the radial velocity method, or alternatively through microlensing. In our analysis of such data, we have identified potential PBH contenders by ruling out any exoplanet candidates that have been detected through direct imaging or transit methods, as they would have sizes consistent with planets rather than…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
