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Detection of Cosmic Structures using the Bispectrum Phase. II. First Results from Application to Cosmic Reionization Using the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array

Authors :
Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan
Carilli, Chris L.
Nikolic, Bojan
Kent, James
Mesinger, Andrei
Kern, Nicholas S.
Bernardi, Gianni
Matika, Siyanda
Abdurashidova, Zara
Aguirre, James E.
Alexander, Paul
Ali, Zaki S.
Balfour, Yanga
Beardsley, Adam P.
Billings, Tashalee S.
Bowman, Judd D.
Bradley, Richard F.
Burba, Jacob
Carey, Steve
Cheng, Carina
DeBoer, David R.
Dexter, Matt
Acedo, Eloy de Lera
Dillon, Joshua S.
Ely, John
Ewall-Wice, Aaron
Fagnoni, Nicolas
Fritz, Randall
Furlanetto, Steven R.
Gale-Sides, Kingsley
Glendenning, Brian
Gorthi, Deepthi
Greig, Bradley
Grobbelaar, Jasper
Halday, Ziyaad
Hazelton, Bryna J.
Hewitt, Jacqueline N.
Hickish, Jack
Jacobs, Daniel C.
Julius, Austin
Kerrigan, Joshua
Kittiwisit, Piyanat
Kohn, Saul A.
Kolopanis, Matthew
Lanman, Adam
La Plante, Paul
Lekalake, Telalo
Lewis, David
Liu, Adrian
MacMahon, David
Malan, Lourence
Malgas, Cresshim
Maree, Matthys
Martinot, Zachary E.
Matsetela, Eunice
Molewa, Mathakane
Morales, Miguel F.
Mosiane, Tshegofalang
Neben, Abraham R.
Parsons, Aaron R.
Patra, Nipanjana
Pieterse, Samantha
Pober, Jonathan C.
Razavi-Ghods, Nima
Ringuette, Jon
Robnett, James
Rosie, Kathryn
Sims, Peter
Smith, Craig
Syce, Angelo
Williams, Peter K. G.
Zheng, Haoxuan
Source :
Phys. Rev. D 102, 022002 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Characterizing the epoch of reionization (EoR) at $z\gtrsim 6$ via the redshifted 21 cm line of neutral Hydrogen (HI) is critical to modern astrophysics and cosmology, and thus a key science goal of many current and planned low-frequency radio telescopes. The primary challenge to detecting this signal is the overwhelmingly bright foreground emission at these frequencies, placing stringent requirements on the knowledge of the instruments and inaccuracies in analyses. Results from these experiments have largely been limited not by thermal sensitivity but by systematics, particularly caused by the inability to calibrate the instrument to high accuracy. The interferometric bispectrum phase is immune to antenna-based calibration and errors therein, and presents an independent alternative to detect the EoR HI fluctuations while largely avoiding calibration systematics. Here, we provide a demonstration of this technique on a subset of data from the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array (HERA) to place approximate constraints on the brightness temperature of the intergalactic medium (IGM). From this limited data, at $z=7.7$ we infer "$1\sigma$" upper limits on the IGM brightness temperature to be $\le 316$ "pseudo" mK at $\kappa_\parallel=0.33$ "pseudo" $h$ Mpc$^{-1}$ (data-limited) and $\le 1000$ "pseudo" mK at $\kappa_\parallel=0.875$ "pseudo" $h$ Mpc$^{-1}$ (noise-limited). The "pseudo" units denote only an approximate and not an exact correspondence to the actual distance scales and brightness temperatures. By propagating models in parallel to the data analysis, we confirm that the dynamic range required to separate the cosmic HI signal from the foregrounds is similar to that in standard approaches, and the power spectrum of the bispectrum phase is still data-limited (at $\gtrsim 10^6$ dynamic range) indicating scope for further improvement in sensitivity as the array build-out continues.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures (including sub-figures). Published in PhRvD. Abstract may be slightly abridged compared to the actual manuscript due to length limitations on arXiv

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. D 102, 022002 (2020)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2005.10275
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevD.102.022002