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Towards Understanding the Origin of Cosmic-Ray Positrons

ContributorsAMS Collaboration
Published inPhysical Review Letters, vol. 122, no. 041102
Publication date2019
Abstract

Precision measurements of cosmic ray positrons are presented up to 1 TeV based on 1.9 million positrons collected by the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer on the International Space Station. The positron flux exhibits complex energy dependence. Its distinctive properties are (a) a significant excess starting from 25.2±1.8  GeV compared to the lower-energy, power-law trend, (b) a sharp dropoff above 284+91−64  GeV, (c) in the entire energy range the positron flux is well described by the sum of a term associated with the positrons produced in the collision of cosmic rays, which dominates at low energies, and a new source term of positrons, which dominates at high energies, and (d) a finite energy cutoff of the source term of Es=810+310−180  GeV is established with a significance of more than 4σ. These experimental data on cosmic ray positrons show that, at high energies, they predominantly originate either from dark matter annihilation or from other astrophysical sources.

Keywords
  • Cosmic-ray positrons
  • AMS02
  • Space detectors
  • Dark matter
Citation (ISO format)
AMS Collaboration. Towards Understanding the Origin of Cosmic-Ray Positrons. In: Physical Review Letters, 2019, vol. 122, n° 041102. doi: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.122.041102
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Article (Published version)
accessLevelPublic
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ISSN of the journal0031-9007
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