A new look at the cosmic ray positron fraction
M. Boudaud, S. Aupetit, S. Caroff, A. Putze, G. Belanger, Y. Genolini,, C. Goy, V. Poireau, V. Poulin, S. Rosier, P. Salati, L. Tao, M. Vecchi

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origin of the rising positron fraction in cosmic rays, exploring dark matter and pulsar sources using latest AMS-02 data and a semi-analytic galactic transport model.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of dark matter and astrophysical explanations for the positron excess, identifying a specific dark matter candidate and potential pulsar sources.
Findings
Favored dark matter particles are over 500 GeV in mass.
A dark matter model with annihilation into four leptons fits constraints.
A list of five pulsars can explain the positron anomaly.
Abstract
The positron fraction in cosmic rays was found to be a steadily increasing in function of energy, above 10 GeV. This behaviour contradicts standard astrophysical mechanisms, in which positrons are secondary particles, produced in the interactions of primary cosmic rays during the propagation in the interstellar medium. The observed anomaly in the positron fraction triggered a lot of excitement, as it could be interpreted as an indirect signature of the presence of dark matter species in the Galaxy. Alternatively, it could be produced by nearby astrophysical sources, such as pulsars. Both hypotheses are probed in this work in light of the latest AMS-02 positron fraction measurements. The transport of the primary and secondary positrons in the Galaxy is described using a semi-analytic two-zone model. MicrOMEGAs is used to model the positron flux generated by dark matter species.…
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