Line-Intensity Mapping: 2017 Status Report
Ely D. Kovetz, Marco P. Viero, Adam Lidz, Laura Newburgh, Mubdi, Rahman, Eric Switzer, Marc Kamionkowski, James Aguirre, Marcelo Alvarez,, James Bock, J. Richard Bond, Goeffry Bower, C. Matt Bradford, Patrick C., Breysse, Philip Bull, Tzu-Ching Chang, Yun-Ting Cheng

TL;DR
This report reviews recent progress in line-intensity mapping, highlighting theoretical, instrumental, and observational advances, initial detections, and future prospects for cosmology and galaxy evolution studies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent developments, experimental efforts, and theoretical models in line-intensity mapping as of 2017.
Findings
Preliminary detections of CO, CII, Lya, and 21cm signals.
Multiple experiments are set to operate soon, promising new data.
Advances in modeling, foreground separation, and data analysis techniques.
Abstract
Following the first two annual intensity mapping workshops at Stanford in March 2016 and Johns Hopkins in June 2017, we report on the recent advances in theory, instrumentation and observation that were presented in these meetings and some of the opportunities and challenges that were identified looking forward. With preliminary detections of CO, [CII], Lya and low-redshift 21cm, and a host of experiments set to go online in the next few years, the field is rapidly progressing on all fronts, with great anticipation for a flood of new exciting results. This current snapshot provides an efficient reference for experts in related fields and a useful resource for nonspecialists. We begin by introducing the concept of line-intensity mapping and then discuss the broad array of science goals that will be enabled, ranging from the history of star formation, reionization and galaxy evolution to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
