Global 21cm signal experiments: A designer's guide
Adrian Liu, Jonathan R. Pritchard, Max Tegmark, Abraham Loeb

TL;DR
This paper provides a comprehensive guide for designing experiments to detect the global 21cm signal, emphasizing the importance of angular resolution and optimized data analysis to distinguish the cosmological signal from foregrounds.
Contribution
It introduces a mathematical framework combining spectral and angular data analysis, highlighting design trade-offs and demonstrating how angular resolution enhances detection significance.
Findings
Angular resolution significantly reduces foreground contamination.
Fine angular resolution improves error reduction with integration time.
High-redshift trough is key for Dark Ages detection.
Abstract
[Abridged] The spatially averaged global spectrum of the redshifted 21cm line has generated much experimental interest, for it is potentially a direct probe of the Epoch of Reionization and the Dark Ages. Since the cosmological signal here has a purely spectral signature, most proposed experiments have little angular sensitivity. This is worrisome because with only spectra, the global 21cm signal can be difficult to distinguish from foregrounds such as Galactic synchrotron radiation, as both are spectrally smooth and the latter is orders of magnitude brighter. We establish a mathematical framework for global signal data analysis in a way that removes foregrounds optimally, complementing spectra with angular information. We explore various experimental design trade-offs, and find that 1) with spectral-only methods, it is impossible to mitigate errors that arise from uncertainties in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Coherence Tomography Applications · Photonic and Optical Devices · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
