Detecting neutral hydrogen in emission at redshift z ~ 1
Nishikanta Khandai, Shiv K. Sethi, Tiziana Di Matteo, Rupert A.C., Croft, Volker Springel, Anirban Jana, Jeffrey P. Gardner

TL;DR
This study uses simulations and existing observations to evaluate the detectability of neutral hydrogen emission at redshift z ~ 1, proposing stacking techniques for improved detection with current radio telescopes.
Contribution
It introduces three models for HI distribution in halos at z ~ 1 and demonstrates the feasibility of detecting the HI mass function through stacking methods with existing radio surveys.
Findings
Stacked 21 cm signals can be detected with moderate observation time.
Detection significance remains high even with increased noise levels.
Undetected satellite galaxies influence the HI emission profile, broadening the signal.
Abstract
We use a large N-body simulation to examine the detectability of HI in emission at redshift z ~ 1, and the constraints imposed by current observations on the neutral hydrogen mass function of galaxies at this epoch. We consider three different models for populating dark matter halos with HI, designed to encompass uncertainties at this redshift. These models are consistent with recent observations of the detection of HI in emission at z ~ 0.8. Whilst detection of 21 cm emission from individual halos requires extremely long integrations with existing radio interferometers, such as the Giant Meter Radio Telescope (GMRT), we show that the stacked 21 cm signal from a large number of halos can be easily detected. However, the stacking procedure requires accurate redshifts of galaxies. We show that radio observations of the field of the DEEP2 spectroscopic galaxy redshift survey should allow…
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