The 511 keV emission from positron annihilation in the Galaxy
N. Prantzos, C. Boehm, A. M. Bykov, R. Diehl, K. Ferriere, N., Guessoum, P. Jean, J. Knoedlseder, A. Marcowith, I. V. Moskalenko, A. Strong,, G. Weidenspointner

TL;DR
The paper reviews the 511 keV gamma-ray emission from positron annihilation in the Galaxy, discussing its spectral and spatial properties, potential sources, and the complex propagation of low-energy positrons in the interstellar medium.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of the observational data, candidate sources, and models of positron propagation, highlighting current challenges and uncertainties.
Findings
Emission is concentrated in the Galactic bulge.
Conventional sources like supernovae and X-ray binaries remain plausible.
Positron propagation complicates source identification.
Abstract
The first gamma-ray line originating from outside the solar system that was ever detected is the 511 keV emission from positron annihilation in the Galaxy. Despite 30 years of intense theoretical and observational investigation, the main sources of positrons have not been identified up to now. Observations in the 1990's with OSSE/CGRO showed that the emission is strongly concentrated towards the Galactic bulge. In the 2000's, the SPI instrument aboard ESA's INTEGRAL gamma-ray observatory allowed scientists to measure that emission across the entire Galaxy, revealing that the bulge/disk luminosity ratio is larger than observed in any other wavelength. This mapping prompted a number of novel explanations, including rather "exotic ones (e.g. dark matter annihilation). However, conventional astrophysical sources, like type Ia supernovae, microquasars or X-ray binaries, are still plausible…
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