Dissecting cosmic-ray electron-positron data with Occam's Razor: the role of known Pulsars
Stefano Profumo (University of California, Santa Cruz)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that known pulsars can naturally explain the positron excess and spectral features observed in cosmic-ray electron-positron data, emphasizing the importance of pulsar contributions and future Fermi-LAT observations.
Contribution
It systematically evaluates known pulsars as sources for cosmic-ray anomalies, providing a reverse-engineering approach to match data with pulsar parameters, and highlights the potential of upcoming observations.
Findings
Pulsars likely explain the PAMELA positron excess with mature, nearby sources.
ATIC spectral features may originate from more distant, younger pulsars.
Multiple pulsars may collectively account for observed cosmic-ray anomalies.
Abstract
We argue that both the positron fraction measured by PAMELA and the peculiar spectral features reported in the total electron-positron (e+e-) flux measured by ATIC have a very natural explanation in electron-positron pairs produced by nearby pulsars. While this possibility was pointed out a long time ago, the greatly improved quality of current data potentially allow to reverse-engineer the problem: given the regions of pulsar parameter space favored by PAMELA and by ATIC, are there known pulsars that explain the data with reasonable assumptions on the injected e+e- pairs? In the context of simple benchmark models for estimating the e+e- output, we consider all known pulsars, as listed in the most complete available catalogue. We find that it is unlikely that a single pulsar be responsible for both the PAMELA e+ fraction anomaly and for the ATIC excess, although two single sources are…
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