Primordial Black Hole Abundance from Reionization
Ziwen Yin, Hanyu Cheng, Luca Visinelli

TL;DR
This paper uses the reionization history of the Universe, analyzed through CMB data, to place new, conservative constraints on the initial abundance of evaporating primordial black holes in a specific mass range.
Contribution
It introduces a fully numerical, time-dependent method combining Hawking evaporation and energy deposition models to constrain PBH abundance from reionization data.
Findings
Established upper limits on PBH abundance consistent with CMB data.
Demonstrated robustness of constraints against reionization modeling uncertainties.
Showed reionization observables are powerful probes of late-time energy injection.
Abstract
We derive robust constraints on the initial abundance of evaporating primordial black holes (PBHs) using the reionization history of the Universe as a cosmological probe. We focus on PBHs that inject electromagnetic (EM) energy into the intergalactic medium (IGM) after recombination, in the mass range . For each PBH mass, we compute the redshift-dependent energy injection from Hawking evaporation using \texttt{BlackHawk}, fully accounting for the time evolution of the PBH mass and the complete spectrum of emitted Standard Model particles and gravitons. The resulting photons and electrons are propagated through the primordial plasma using \texttt{DarkHistory}, which self-consistently models EM cascades and determines the fraction of injected energy deposited into ionization, excitation, and heating…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
