Detection of the 511 keV Galactic position annihilation line with COSI

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL(2020)

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摘要
The signature of positron annihilation, namely the 511 keV gamma-ray line, was first detected coming from the direction of the Galactic center in the 1970s, but the source of Galactic positrons still remains a puzzle. The measured flux of the annihilation corresponds to an intense steady source of positron production, with an annihilation rate on the order of similar to 10(43) gamma-ray line signal, and it shows a concentration toward the Galactic center region. An additional low-surface brightness component is aligned with the Galactic disk; however, the morphology of the latter is not well constrained. The Compton Spectrometer and Imager (COSI) is a balloon-borne soft gamma-ray (0.2-5 MeV) telescope designed to perform wide-field imaging and high-resolution spectroscopy. One of its major goals is to further our understanding of Galactic positrons. COSI had a 46-day balloon flight in 2016 May-July from Wanaka, New Zealand, and here we report on the detection and spectral and spatial analyses of the 511 keV emission from those observations. To isolate the Galactic positron annihilation emission from instrumental background, we have developed a technique to separate celestial signals using the COMPTEL Data Space. With this method, we find a 7.2 sigma detection of the 511 keV line. We find that the spatial distribution is not consistent with a single point source, and it appears to be broader than what has previously been reported.
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