A practical theorem on using interferometry to measure the global 21-cm signal
Tejaswi Venumadhav, Tzu-Ching Chang, Olivier Dor\'e, Christopher M., Hirata

TL;DR
This paper presents a theorem linking interferometric setup sensitivity to the global 21-cm signal with cross-talk and correlated thermal noise, emphasizing the importance of characterizing these effects for accurate measurements.
Contribution
It establishes a fundamental relationship between interferometric sensitivity and system effects like cross-talk and thermal noise, guiding design and calibration.
Findings
Sensitivity is directly related to cross-talk and correlated thermal noise.
Reducing cross-talk or thermal noise also reduces sensitivity proportionally.
Zero cross-talk setups can achieve high sensitivity if properly designed.
Abstract
The sky-averaged, or global, background of redshifted cm radiation is expected to be a rich source of information on cosmological reheating and reionizaton. However, measuring the signal is technically challenging: one must extract a small, frequency-dependent signal from under much brighter spectrally smooth foregrounds. Traditional approaches to study the global signal have used single antennas, which require one to calibrate out the frequency-dependent structure in the overall system gain (due to internal reflections, for example) as well as remove the noise bias from auto-correlating a single amplifier output. This has motivated proposals to measure the signal using cross-correlations in interferometric setups, where additional calibration techniques are available. In this paper we focus on the general principles driving the sensitivity of the interferometric setups to the…
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