We consider the signature and detectability of gravitational microlensing of
distant quasars by cosmic strings. Because of the simple image configuration
such events will have a characteristic light curve, in which a source would
appear to brighten by exactly a factor of two, before reverting to its original
apparent brightness. We calculate the optical depth and event rate, and
conclude that current predictions and limits on the total length of strings on
the sky imply optical depths of \la 10^{-8} and event rates of fewer than one
event per 109 sources per year. Disregarding those predictions but replacing
them with limits on the density of cosmic strings from the CMB fluctuation
spectrum, leaves only a small region of parameter space (in which the sky
contains about 3×105 strings with deficit angle of order 0.3
milli-arcseconds) for which a microlensing survey of exposure 107
source-years, spanning a 20--40-year period, might reveal the presence of
cosmic strings.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in MNRA