Astrometric weak lensing with Gaia DR3 and future catalogues: searches for dark matter substructure

Author:

Mondino Cristina1ORCID,Tsantilas Andreas2,Taki Anna-Maria3ORCID,Van Tilburg Ken24ORCID,Weiner Neal2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics , 31 Caroline St N, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 2Y5 , Canada

2. Center for Cosmology and Particle Physics, Department of Physics, New York University , 726 Broadway, New York, NY 10003 , USA

3. Institute for Fundamental Science, University of Oregon , 1371 E. 13th Ave, Eugene, OR 97403 , USA

4. Center for Computational Astrophysics, Flatiron Institute , 162 5th Ave, New York, NY 10010 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Small-scale dark matter structures lighter than a billion solar masses are an important probe of primordial density fluctuations and dark matter microphysics. Due to their lack of starlight emission, their only guaranteed signatures are gravitational in nature. We report on results of a search for astrometric weak lensing by compact dark matter subhaloes in the Milky Way with Gaia DR3 data. Using a matched-filter analysis to look for correlated imprints of time-domain lensing on the proper motions of background stars in the Magellanic Clouds, we exclude order-unity substructure fractions in haloes with masses Ml between 107 and $10^9 \, {\rm M}_\odot$ and sizes of one parsec or smaller. We forecast that a similar approach based on proper accelerations across the entire sky with data from Gaia DR4 may be sensitive to substructure fractions of fl ≳ 10−3 in the much lower mass range of $10 \, {\rm M}_\odot \lesssim M_l \lesssim 3 \times 10^3 \, {\rm M}_\odot$. We further propose an analogous technique for stacked star–star lensing events in the regime of large impact parameters. Our first implementation is not yet sufficiently sensitive but serves as a useful diagnostic and calibration tool; future data releases should enable average stellar mass measurements using this stacking method.1

Funder

National Science Foundation

BSF

Simons Foundation

Government of Canada

Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada

Ontario Ministry of Economic Development, Job Creation and Trade

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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