Detection of positron in-flight annihilation from the Galaxy
J\"urgen Kn\"odlseder, Karim Sabri, Pierre Jean, Peter von Ballmoos, Gerry Skinner, Werner Collmar

TL;DR
This study analyzed archival gamma-ray data to detect in-flight positron annihilation in the Galaxy, revealing extended emission that constrains positron origins and suggests possible links to dark matter or black hole activity.
Contribution
First detection of positron in-flight annihilation emission in the MeV range towards the Galactic bulge, providing new insights into positron sources and energies.
Findings
Extended MeV emission attributed to ~2 MeV positrons
Positron production likely quasi-mono-energetic
Point-like emission possibly linked to Sgr A* activity
Abstract
Although the annihilation of positrons towards the Galactic centre was established more than 50 years ago through the detection of a 511 keV -ray line, the origin of the positrons remains unknown. The -ray line should be accompanied by continuum emission from positron in-flight annihilation, which, until now, has not been detected. We aim to detect positron in-flight annihilation emission, as it provides information on the kinetic energy of the positrons that is key in determining the origin of Galactic positrons. We analysed archival data obtained by the COMPTEL instrument on the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory satellite to search for positron in-flight annihilation emission in the MeV energy range. Our analysis revealed extended emission in the MeV energy range towards the bulge of the Galaxy, which we attribute to in-flight annihilation of positrons produced with…
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