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The possibility that primordial black holes (PBHs) form a part of dark matter has been considered over a wide mass range from the Planck mass ($10^{-5}~rm g$) to the level of the supermassive black hole in the center of the galaxy. Primordial origin might be one of the most important formation channel of massive black holes. We propose the lensing effect of very long baseline interferometer observations of compact radio sources with extremely high angular resolution as a promising probe for the presence of intergalactic PBHs in the mass range $sim10^2$-$10^9~M_{odot}$. For a sample of well-measured 543 compact radio sources, no millilensing multiple images are found with angular separations between $0.2$ milliarcsecond and $50$ milliarcseconds. From this null search result, we derive that the fraction of dark matter made up of PBHs in the mass range $sim10^4$-$10^8~M_{odot}$ is $lesssim0.56%$ at $68%$ confidence level.
The possibility that primordial black holes (PBHs) form a part of dark matter has been considered for a long time but poorly constrained in the $1-100~M_{odot}$ (or stellar mass range). However, a renewed special interest of PBHs in this mass window
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,
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
We consider the application of peaks theory to the calculation of the number density of peaks relevant for primordial black hole (PBH) formation. For PBHs, the final mass is related to the amplitude and scale of the perturbation from which it forms,
Primordial magnetic field (PMF) is one of the feasible candidates to explain observed large-scale magnetic fields, for example, intergalactic magnetic fields. We present a new mechanism that brings us information about PMFs on small scales based on t