24 research outputs found

    The `excess' of primary cosmic ray electrons

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    With the accurate cosmic ray (CR) electron and positron spectra (denoted as Φe−\Phi_{\rm e^{-}} and Φe+\Phi_{\rm e^{+}}, respectively) measured by AMS-02 collaboration, the difference between the electron and positron fluxes (i.e., ΔΦ=Φe−−Φe+\Delta \Phi=\Phi_{\rm e^{-}}-\Phi_{\rm e^{+}}), dominated by the propagated primary electrons, can be reliably inferred. In the standard model, the spectrum of propagated primary CR electrons at energies ≥30\geq 30 GeV softens with the increase of energy. The absence of any evidence for such a continuous spectral softening in ΔΦ\Delta \Phi strongly suggests a significant `excess' of primary CR electrons and at energies of 100−400100-400 GeV the identified excess component has a flux comparable to that of the observed positron excess. Middle-age but `nearby' supernova remnants (e.g., Monogem and Geminga) are favored sources for such an excess.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, Phys. Lett. B, in pres
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