On the Positron Fraction in Cosmic Rays and Models of Cosmic-Ray Propagation

29 Jun 2010, 16:30
1h
Atrium (Fermilab)

Atrium

Fermilab

PO Box 500 Batavia, IL 60510
Board: 21
Poster Balloon and satellite experiments Poster Session I

Speaker

Mr Benjamin Burch (Washington University in St. Louis)

Description

The positron fraction observed by PAMELA and other experiments up to ~100 GeV is analyzed in terms of models of cosmic-ray propagation. It is shown that generically we expect the positron fraction to reach ~0.6 at energies of several TeV, and its energy dependence bears an intimate but subtle connection with that of the boron to carbon ratio in cosmic rays. The observed positron fraction can be fit in a model that assumes a significant fraction of the boron below ~10 GeV is generated through spallation of cosmic-ray nuclei in a cocoon-like region surrounding the sources, and the positrons of energy higher than a few GeV are almost exclusively generated through cosmic-ray interactions in the general interstellar medium. Such a model is consistent with the bounds on cosmic-ray anisotropies and other observations.
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Primary authors

Mr Benjamin Burch (Washington University in St. Louis) Dr Ramanath Cowsik (Washington University in St. Louis)

Presentation materials