Origins of sharp cosmic-ray electron structures and the DAMPE excess
Xian-Jun Huang, Yue-Liang Wu, Wei-Hong Zhang, Yu-Feng Zhou

TL;DR
This paper investigates the origins of narrow spectral features in cosmic-ray electrons, especially the DAMPE excess at 1.4 TeV, proposing two scenarios involving dark matter and astrophysical sources, with implications for source proximity and anisotropy.
Contribution
It introduces two mechanisms—spectrum broadening and phase-space shrinking—that can produce narrow cosmic-ray electron features, linking them to dark matter and astrophysical sources.
Findings
DAMPE excess suggests nearby dark matter or pulsar sources.
Narrow spectral features constrain source distance and injection spectrum.
Predicted anisotropies could be detectable in future observations.
Abstract
Nearby sources may contribute to cosmic-ray electron (CRE) structures at high energies. Recently, the first DAMPE results on the CRE flux hinted at a narrow excess at energy ~1.4 TeV. We show that in general a spectral structure with a narrow width appears in two scenarios: I) "Spectrum broadening" for the continuous sources with a delta-function-like injection spectrum. In this scenario, a finite width can develop after propagation through the Galaxy, which can reveal the distance of the source. Well-motivated sources include mini-spikes and subhalos formed by dark matter (DM) particles which annihilate directly into e+e- pairs. II) "Phase-space shrinking" for burst-like sources with a power-law-like injection spectrum. The spectrum after propagation can shrink at a cooling-related cutoff energy and form a sharp spectral peak. The peak can be more prominent due to the…
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