Spectra of Cosmic Ray Sodium and Aluminum and Unexpected Aluminum Excess
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 cosmic-ray sodium and aluminum spectra measured by AMS-02, finding a good match for sodium but an unexpected excess of aluminum, and discusses potential astrophysical origins for these anomalies.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of AMS-02 sodium and aluminum spectra with model predictions, revealing an aluminum excess and proposing astrophysical sources for observed anomalies.
Findings
Sodium spectrum matches model predictions well.
Aluminum spectrum shows a significant excess from 2-7 GV.
Excesses in Li, F, and Al may originate from local Wolf-Rayet stars.
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-Si, Fe), which resulted in a number of breakthroughs. The most recent AMS-02 result is the measurement of the spectra of CR sodium and aluminum up to 2 TV. Given their low solar system abundances, a significant fraction of each element is produced in fragmentations of heavier species, predominantly Ne, Mg, and Si. In this paper, we use precise measurements of the sodium and aluminum spectra by AMS-02 together with ACE-CRIS and Voyager 1 data to test their origin. We show that the sodium spectrum agrees well with the predictions made with the GalProp-HelMod framework, while aluminum spectrum shows a significant excess in the rigidity range from 2-7 GV. In this context, we discuss the origin of…
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