The pinching method for Galactic cosmic ray positrons: implications in the light of precision measurements
M. Boudaud, E. F. Bueno, S. Caroff, Y. Genolini, V. Poulin, V., Poireau, A. Putze, S. Rosier, P. Salati, M. Vecchi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new semi-analytical method to analyze cosmic ray positron data, accounting for previously neglected transport processes, and finds that dark matter annihilation models poorly fit the observed positron excess.
Contribution
It develops a novel pinching method to incorporate transport effects below a few GeV, providing tighter constraints on cosmic ray propagation models and dark matter interpretations.
Findings
Large diffusion coefficients are favored by the data.
Dark matter annihilation models poorly fit the positron excess.
Positron data alone disfavor single dark matter species explanations.
Abstract
Two years ago, the AMS collaboration released the most precise measurement of the cosmic ray positron flux. It confirms that pure secondary predictions fall below the data above 10 GeV, suggesting the presence of a primary component, e.g. annihilations of WIMPs dark matter. Most analyses have focused on the high-energy part of the spectrum, disregarding the GeV energy region where cosmic ray transport is harder to model and solar modulation comes into play. Given the high quality of AMS measurements, it is timely to re-examine the positron anomaly over the entire energy range, taking into account transport processes so far neglected, e.g. convection or diffusive re-acceleration. We devise a new semi-analytical method to take into account transport processes so far neglected, but important below a few GeV. It is based on the pinching of inverse Compton and synchrotron energy losses…
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