On the detection of spectral ripples from the Recombination Epoch
Mayuri Sathyanarayana Rao, Ravi Subrahmanyan, N Udaya Shankar, Jens, Chluba

TL;DR
This paper explores the feasibility of detecting faint spectral ripples from the Universe's recombination epoch using a specialized ground-based radio telescope, which could reveal new insights into cosmic history beyond the last scattering surface.
Contribution
It introduces a novel observational approach and an algorithm for detecting weak recombination lines in the cosmic microwave background spectrum.
Findings
Optimal frequency band identified as 2--6 GHz for detection.
Detection could be achieved with 90% confidence in about 255 days of observation.
Proposes a dedicated telescope, APSERa, for this purpose.
Abstract
Photons emitted during the epochs of Hydrogen () and Helium recombination ( for HeII HeI, for HeIII HeII) are predicted to appear as broad, weak spectral distortions of the Cosmic Microwave Background. We present a feasibility study for a ground-based experimental detection of these recombination lines, which would provide an observational constraint on the thermal ionization history of the Universe, uniquely probing astrophysical cosmology beyond the last scattering surface. We find that an octave band in the 2--6 GHz window is optimal for such an experiment, both maximizing signal-to-noise ratio and including sufficient line spectral structure. At these frequencies the predicted signal appears as an additive quasi-sinusoidal component with amplitude about nK…
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