HIRAX: A Probe of Dark Energy and Radio Transients
L.B. Newburgh, K. Bandura, M. A. Bucher, T.-C. Chang, H.C. Chiang,, J.F. Cliche, R. Dave, M. Dobbs, C. Clarkson, K. M. Ganga, T. Gogo, A. Gumba,, N. Gupta, M. Hilton, B. Johnstone, A. Karastergiou, M. Kunz, D. Lokhorst, R., Maartens, S. Macpherson, M. Mdlalose, K. Moodley

TL;DR
HIRAX is a new radio interferometer designed to map large-scale structure and study radio transients, aiming to constrain Dark Energy, measure high-redshift structure, and discover new transient phenomena.
Contribution
This paper introduces HIRAX, a novel 1024-dish radio interferometer in South Africa, enhancing cosmological measurements and transient detection capabilities.
Findings
HIRAX will map the southern sky over four years.
It will measure BAO at higher redshifts than current surveys.
HIRAX will enable new discoveries in radio transients and pulsars.
Abstract
The Hydrogen Intensity and Real-time Analysis eXperiment (HIRAX) is a new 400-800MHz radio interferometer under development for deployment in South Africa. HIRAX will comprise 1024 six meter parabolic dishes on a compact grid and will map most of the southern sky over the course of four years. HIRAX has two primary science goals: to constrain Dark Energy and measure structure at high redshift, and to study radio transients and pulsars. HIRAX will observe unresolved sources of neutral hydrogen via their redshifted 21-cm emission line (`hydrogen intensity mapping'). The resulting maps of large-scale structure at redshifts 0.8-2.5 will be used to measure Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO). HIRAX will improve upon current BAO measurements from galaxy surveys by observing a larger cosmological volume (larger in both survey area and redshift range) and by measuring BAO at higher redshift when…
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