15–17 Apr 2015
CERN
Europe/Zurich timezone
There is a live webcast for this event.

It's About Time: Interpreting AMS Antimatter Data in Terms of Cosmic Ray Propagation

15 Apr 2015, 16:15
45m
500/1-001 - Main Auditorium (CERN)

500/1-001 - Main Auditorium

CERN

385 Route de Meyrin 1217 Meyrin Geneva Switzerland
400
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Speaker

Dr Kfir BLUM (Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton)

Description

If cosmic ray positrons come from a secondary origin, then their production spectrum is correlated with the production spectrum of other secondary particles such as boron and antiprotons through scattering cross sections measured in the laboratory. This allows to define a first-principle upper bound on the positron flux at the Earth, independent of propagation model assumptions. Using currently available B/C and antiproton/proton data, we show that the positron flux reported by AMS is consistent with the bound and saturates it at high energies. This coincidence is a compelling indication for a secondary source. We explain how improved AMS measurements of the high energy boron, antiproton, and secondary radioactive nuclei fluxes can corroborate or falsify the secondary source hypothesis. Assuming that the positrons are secondary, we show that AMS data imply a propagation time in the Galaxy of order 1Myr or less for cosmic rays with magnetic rigidity > 300 GV. This corresponds to an average traversed interstellar matter density of ∼ 1 particle/cc, comparable to the density of the Milky Way gaseous disk.

Presentation materials