Gamma-ray spectroscopy of Positron Annihilation in the Milky Way
Thomas Siegert, Roland Diehl, Gerasim Khachatryan, Martin G. H., Krause, Fabrizia Guglielmetti, Jochen Greiner, Andrew W. Strong, Xiaoling, Zhang

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution gamma-ray spectroscopy to analyze positron annihilation in the Milky Way, revealing detailed spectral and spatial characteristics of the 511 keV emission from the bulge and disk regions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spectral and spatial analysis of positron annihilation gamma-rays in the Galaxy using SPI on INTEGRAL, including new background modeling and multi-component sky fitting.
Findings
Confirmed extended annihilation components at 58σ significance
Derived spectra and spatial extents for bulge and disk regions
Quantified flux ratios and spectral differences between components
Abstract
The annihilation of positrons in the Galaxy's interstellar medium produces characteristic gamma-rays with a line at 511 keV. This emission has been observed with the spectrometer SPI on INTEGRAL, confirming a puzzling morphology with bright emission from an extended bulge-like region, and faint disk emission. Most plausible sources of positrons are believed to be distributed throughout the disk of the Galaxy. We aim to constrain characteristic spectral shapes for different spatial components in the disk and bulge with the high-resolution gamma-ray spectrometer SPI, based on a new instrumental background method and detailed multi-component sky model fitting. We confirm the detection of the main extended components of characteristic annihilation gamma-ray signatures at 58 significance in the line. The total Galactic line intensity amounts to…
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