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The balloon-borne Compton Spectrometer and Imager (COSI) had a successful 46-day flight in 2016. The instrument is sensitive to photons in the energy range $0.2$-$5$ MeV. Compton telescopes have the advantage of a unique imaging response and provide the possibility of strong background suppression. With its high-purity germanium detectors, COSI can precisely map $gamma$-ray line emission. The strongest persistent and diffuse $gamma$-ray line signal is the 511 keV emission line from the annihilation of electrons with positrons from the direction of the Galactic centre. While many sources have been proposed to explain the amount of positrons, $dot{N}_{mathrm{e^+}} sim 10^{50},mathrm{e^+,yr^{-1}}$, the true contributions remain unsolved. In this study, we aim at imaging the 511 keV sky with COSI and pursue a full-forward modelling approach, using a simulated and binned imaging response. For the strong instrumental background, we describe an empirical approach to take the balloon environment into account. We perform two alternative methods to describe the signal: Richardson-Lucy deconvolution, an iterative method towards the maximum likelihood solution, and model fitting with pre-defined emission templates. Consistently with both methods, we find a 511 keV bulge signal with a flux between $0.9$ and $3.1 times 10^{-3},mathrm{ph,cm^{-2},s^{-1}}$, confirming earlier measurements, and also indications of more extended emission. The upper limit we find for the 511 keV disk, $< 4.3 times 10^{-3},mathrm{ph,cm^{-2},s^{-1}}$, is consistent with previous detections. For large-scale emission with weak gradients, coded aperture mask instruments suffer from their inability to distinguish isotropic emission from instrumental background, while Compton-telescopes provide a clear imaging response, independent of the true emission.
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 annih
The first gamma-ray line originating from outside the solar system that was ever detected is the 511 keV emission from positron annihilation in the Galaxy. Despite 30 years of intense theoretical and observational investigation, the main sources of p
The imaging spectrometer SPI on board ESAs INTEGRAL observatory provides us with an unprecedented view of positron annihilation in our Galaxy. The first sky maps in the 511 keV annihilation line and in the positronium continuum from SPI showed a puzz
We use 15 years of $gamma$-ray data from INTEGRAL/SPI in a refined investigation of the morphology of the Galactic bulge positron annihilation signal. Our spatial analysis confirms that the signal traces the old stellar population in the bulge and re
The first detection of a gamma ray line with an energy of about 500 keV from the center our Galaxy dates back to the early seventies. Thanks to the astrophysical application of high spectral resolution detectors, it was soon clear that this radiation