A Hint of a Low-Energy Excess in Cosmic-Ray Fluorine
M. J. Boschini, S. Della Torre, M. Gervasi, D. Grandi, G. Johannesson,, G. La Vacca, N. Masi, I. V. Moskalenko, S. Pensotti, T. A. Porter, L., Quadrani, P. G. Rancoita, D. Rozza, M. Tacconi

TL;DR
This paper analyzes precise AMS-02 measurements of cosmic-ray fluorine, revealing a potential low-energy excess that suggests the existence of a primary fluorine component, challenging the standard secondary origin paradigm.
Contribution
First detailed modeling of cosmic-ray fluorine spectrum using AMS-02 data, indicating a possible primary fluorine component at low energies.
Findings
Detected an excess below 10 GV in fluorine spectrum
Provided an updated local interstellar spectrum of fluorine
Suggested the need to reconsider fluorine's origin in cosmic rays
Abstract
Since its launch, the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-02 (AMS-02) has delivered outstanding quality measurements of the spectra of cosmic-ray (CR) species, , , and nuclei (H--O, Ne, Mg, Si, Fe), which resulted in a number of breakthroughs. The most recent AMS-02 result is the measurement of the spectrum of CR fluorine up to 2 TV. Given its very low solar system abundance, fluorine in CRs is thought to be mostly secondary, produced in fragmentations of heavier species, predominantly Ne, Mg, and Si. Similar to the best-measured secondary-to-primary boron to carbon nuclei ratio that is widely used to study the origin and propagation of CR species, the precise fluorine data would allow the origin of Si-group nuclei to be studied independently. Meanwhile, the secondary origin of CR fluorine has never been tested in a wide energy range due to the lack of accurate CR data.…
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