A polarimetric approach for constraining the dynamic foreground spectrum for cosmological global 21-cm measurements
Bang D. Nhan, Richard F. Bradley, and Jack O. Burns

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel polarimetric method to isolate and measure the foreground spectrum in cosmological 21-cm observations, improving foreground removal by exploiting polarization modulation due to Earth rotation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a polarimetric technique that separates foreground polarization from the 21-cm signal using harmonic analysis of Earth rotation-induced polarization modulation.
Findings
Simulations show successful recovery of the 21-cm signal with the method.
The approach produces separate spectra for foreground and total sky power.
Potential for improved foreground subtraction in future experiments.
Abstract
The cosmological global (sky-averaged) 21-cm signal is a powerful tool to probe the evolution of the intergalactic medium (IGM) in high-redshift Universe (). One of the biggest observational challenges is to remove the foreground spectrum which is at least four orders of magnitude brighter than the cosmological 21-cm emission. Conventional global 21-cm experiments rely on the spectral smoothness of the foreground synchrotron emission to separate it from the unique 21-cm spectral structures in a single total-power spectrum. However, frequency-dependent instrumental and observational effects are known to corrupt such smoothness and complicates the foreground subtraction. We introduce a polarimetric approach to measure the projection-induced polarization of the anisotropic foreground onto a stationary dual-polarized antenna. Due to Earth rotation, when pointing the antenna at a…
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