I dont like to give answer choices in favour of Idioms

. However, I got it wrong.
Here ,I got something interesting from webster site.
Avoid confusing
the sense of possibility in may with the implication of might, that a hypothetical situation has not in fact occurred. For instance, let's say there's been a helicopter crash at the airport. In his initial report, before all the facts are gathered, a newscaster could say that the pilot "
may have been injured." After we discover that the pilot is in fact all right, the newscaster can now say that the pilot "
might have been injured" because it is a hypothetical situation that has not occurred. Another example: a body had been identified after much work by a detective. It was reported that "without this painstaking work, the body may have remained unidentified." Since the body was, in fact, identified, might is clearly called for.