A Search for Wandering Black Holes in the Milky Way with Gaia and DECaLS
2021
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/ac0896
We present a search for "hypercompact" star clusters in the Milky Way using a combination of Gaia and the Dark Energy Camera Legacy Survey (DECaLS). Such putative clusters, with sizes of similar to 1 pc and containing 500-5000 stars, are expected to remain bound to intermediate-mass black holes (M (BH) approximate to 10(3)-10(5) M (circle dot)) that may be accreted into the Milky Way halo within dwarf satellites. Using the semianalytic model SatGen, we find an expected similar to 100 wandering intermediate-mass black holes if every infalling satellite hosts a black hole. We do not find any such clusters in our search. Our upper limits rule out 100% occupancy but do not put stringent constraints on the occupation fraction. Of course, we need stronger constraints on the properties of the putative star clusters, including their assumed sizes and the fraction of stars that would be compact remnants.