Cosmological observations precisely measure primordial variations in the
density of the Universe at megaparsec and larger scales, but much smaller
scales remain poorly constrained. However, sufficiently large initial
perturbations at small scales can lead to an abundance of ultradense dark
matter minihalos that form during the radiation epoch and survive into the
late-time Universe. Because of their early formation, these objects can be
compact enough to produce detectable microlensing signatures. We investigate
whether the EROS, OGLE, and HSC surveys can probe these halos by fully
accounting for finite source size and extended lens effects. We find that
current data may already constrain the amplitudes of primordial curvature
perturbations in a new region of parameter space, but this conclusion is
strongly sensitive to yet undetermined details about the internal structures of
these ultradense halos. Under optimistic assumptions, current and future HSC
data would constrain a power spectrum that features an enhancement at scales k∼107/Mpc, and an amplitude as low as Pζ​≃10−4 may be accessible. This is a particularly interesting regime because
it connects to primordial black hole formation in a portion of the
LIGO/Virgo/Kagra mass range and the production of scalar-induced gravitational
waves in the nanohertz frequency range reachable by pulsar timing arrays. These
prospects motivate further study of the ultradense halo formation scenario to
clarify their internal structures.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures. v2: matching published versio