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Primordial black holes (PBHs) are of fundamental interest in cosmology and astrophysics, and have received much attention as a dark matter candidate and as a potential source of gravitational waves. One possible PBH formation mechanism is the gravitational collapse of cosmic strings. Thus far, the entirety of the literature on PBH production from cosmic strings has focused on the collapse of (quasi)circular cosmic string loops, which make up only a tiny fraction of the cosmic loop population. We demonstrate here a novel PBH formation mechanism: the collapse of a small segment of cosmic string in the neighbourhood of a cusp. Using the hoop conjecture, we show that collapse is inevitable whenever a cusp appears on a macroscopically-large loop, forming a PBH whose rest mass is smaller than the mass of the loop by a factor of the dimensionless string tension squared, $(Gmu)^2$. Since cusps are generic features of cosmic string loops, and do not rely on finely-tuned loop configurations like circular collapse, this implies that cosmic strings produce PBHs in far greater numbers than has previously been recognised. The resulting PBHs are highly spinning and boosted to ultrarelativistic velocities; they populate a unique region of the BH mass-spin parameter space, and are therefore a smoking gun observational signature of cosmic strings. We derive new constraints on $Gmu$ from the evaporation of cusp-collapse PBHs, and update existing constraints on $Gmu$ from gravitational-wave searches.
We update the constraints on the fraction of the Universe that may have gone into primordial black holes (PBHs) over the mass range $10^{-5}text{--}10^{50}$ g. Those smaller than $sim 10^{15}$ g would have evaporated by now due to Hawking radiation,
In this work we study the imprints of a primordial cosmic string on inflationary power spectrum. Cosmic string induces two distinct contributions on curvature perturbations power spectrum. The first type of correction respects the translation invaria
An observable stochastic background of gravitational waves is generated whenever primordial black holes are created in the early universe thanks to a small-scale enhancement of the curvature perturbation. We calculate the anisotropies and non-Gaussia
The fraction of the Universe going into primordial black holes (PBHs) with initial mass M_* approx 5 times 10^{14} g, such that they are evaporating at the present epoch, is strongly constrained by observations of both the extragalactic and Galactic
A universal mechanism may be responsible for several unresolved cosmic conundra. The sudden drop in the pressure of relativistic matter at $W^{pm}/Z^{0}$ decoupling, the quark--hadron transition and $e^{+}e^{-}$ annihilation enhances the probability