Foregrounds for observations of the cosmological 21 cm line: I. First Westerbork measurements of Galactic emission at 150 MHz in a low latitude field
G. Bernardi, A.G. de Bruyn, M.A. Brentjens, B. Ciardi, G. Harker, V., Jelic, L.V.E. Koopmans, P. Labropoulos, A. Offringa, V.N. Pandey, J. Schaye,, R.M. Thomas, S. Yatawatta, S. Zaroubi

TL;DR
This study characterizes Galactic foreground emissions at 150 MHz in a low-latitude field, detecting diffuse and polarized emissions, and assesses their impact on cosmological 21 cm observations.
Contribution
First measurements of Galactic diffuse and polarized emission fluctuations at 150 MHz in a low-latitude region, providing crucial data for epoch of reionization experiments.
Findings
Detected diffuse Galactic emission fluctuations with an rms of 14 K.
Measured a polarized emission rms of 7.2 K on 4 arcmin scales.
Estimated foreground contamination levels for 21 cm cosmological signals.
Abstract
We present the first results from a series of observations conducted with the Westerbork telescope in the 140--160 MHz range with a 2 arcmin resolution aimed at characterizing the properties of the foregrounds for epoch of reionization experiments. For the first time we have detected fluctuations in the Galactic diffuse emission on scales greater than 13 arcmin at 150 MHz, in the low Galactic latitude area known as Fan region. Those fluctuations have an of 14 K. The total intensity power spectrum shows a power--law behaviour down to with slope . The detection of diffuse emission at smaller angular scales is limited by residual point sources. We measured an confusion noise of 3 mJy beam. Diffuse polarized emission was also detected for the first time at this frequency. The polarized signal shows complex structure both…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
