Effects Of The Ionosphere On Ground-Based Detection Of The Global 21 CM Signal From The Cosmic Dawn And The Dark Ages
Abhirup Datta, Richard Bradley, Jack O. Burns, Geraint Harker, Attila, Komjathy, T. Joseph W. Lazio

TL;DR
This paper investigates how Earth's dynamic ionosphere affects ground-based detection of the faint 21 cm cosmological signal, highlighting the challenges posed by flicker noise and suggesting space-based observation as a better alternative.
Contribution
First study to analyze the impact of a time-varying ionosphere on global 21 cm experiments, emphasizing calibration difficulties and proposing lunar orbit observations.
Findings
Ionospheric effects introduce flicker noise scaling as ν^{-2} in observations.
Calibration inaccuracies limit ground-based detection below 100 MHz.
Space-based observations above Earth's atmosphere are recommended for better detection.
Abstract
Detection of the global HI 21 cm signal from Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of Reionization is the key science driver for several ongoing ground-based and future ground/space-based experiments. The crucial spectral features in the global 21 cm signal (turning points) occur at low radio frequencies <100 MHz. In addition to the human-generated RFI, Earth's ionosphere drastically corrupts low-frequency radio observations from the ground. In this paper, we examine the effects of time-varying ionospheric refraction, absorption and thermal emission at these low radio frequencies and their combined effect on any ground-based global 21 cm experiment. It should be noted that this is the first study of the effect of a dynamic ionosphere on global 21 cm experiments. The fluctuations in the ionosphere are influenced by solar activity with flicker noise characteristics. The same characteristics are reflected…
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