Positron annihilation signatures associated with the outburst of the microquasar V404 Cygni
Thomas Siegert, Roland Diehl, Jochen Greiner, Martin G. H. Krause,, Andrei M. Beloborodov, Marion Cadolle Bel, Fabrizia Guglielmetti, Jerome, Rodriguez, Andrew W. Strong, Xiaoling Zhang

TL;DR
This study detects variable positron annihilation signatures in the microquasar V404 Cygni, suggesting microquasars are significant sources of galactic electron-positron plasma and related gamma-ray emissions.
Contribution
It provides the first clear evidence of positron annihilation signatures during microquasar flaring activity, linking microquasars to galactic gamma-ray phenomena.
Findings
Detection of variable positron annihilation signatures.
Microquasars may be primary sources of galactic electron-positron plasma.
Supports microquasars' role in diffuse galactic gamma-ray emission.
Abstract
Microquasars are stellar-mass black holes accreting matter from a companion star and ejecting plasma jets at almost the speed of light. They are analogues of quasars that contain supermassive black holes of to solar masses. Accretion in microquasars varies on much shorter timescales than in quasars and occasionally produces exceptionally bright X-ray flares. How the flares are produced is unclear, as is the mechanism for launching the relativistic jets and their composition. An emission line near 511 kiloelectronvolts has long been sought in the emission spectrum of microquasars as evidence for the expected electron-positron plasma. Transient high-energy spectral features have been reported in two objects, but their positron interpretation remains contentious. Here we report observations of -ray emission from the microquasar V404 Cygni during a recent period of…
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