Primordial non-gaussianity from the bispectrum of 21-cm fluctuations in the dark ages
Julian B. Mu\~noz, Yacine Ali-Ha\"imoud, Marc Kamionkowski

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the potential of 21-cm fluctuations during the dark ages to measure primordial non-Gaussianity, accounting for secondary effects and forecasting high sensitivity for future experiments.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of primary and secondary bispectra of 21-cm fluctuations, introducing a Fisher approach to estimate primordial non-Gaussianity detection limits.
Findings
Secondary bispectrum degenerates with primordial bispectrum.
Uncertainties in secondary bispectrum bias f_NL measurements.
Future experiments could reach f_NL sensitivity of ~0.03 to 0.04.
Abstract
A measurement of primordial non-gaussianity will be of paramount importance to distinguish between different models of inflation. Cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy observations have set unprecedented bounds on the non-gaussianity parameter f_NL but the interesting regime f_NL <~ 1 is beyond their reach. Brightness-temperature fluctuations in the 21-cm line during the dark ages (z ~ 30-100) are a promising successor to CMB studies, giving access to a much larger number of modes. They are, however, intrinsically non-linear, which results in secondary non-gaussianities orders of magnitude larger than the sought-after primordial signal. In this paper we carefully compute the primary and secondary bispectra of 21-cm fluctuations on small scales. We use the flat-sky formalism, which greatly simplifies the analysis, while still being very accurate on small angular scales. We show…
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