Ingredients for 21cm intensity mapping
Francisco Villaescusa-Navarro, Shy Genel, Emanuele Castorina, Andrej, Obuljen, David N. Spergel, Lars Hernquist, Dylan Nelson, Isabella P. Carucci,, Annalisa Pillepich, Federico Marinacci, Benedikt Diemer, Mark Vogelsberger,, Rainer Weinberger, Rudiger Pakmor

TL;DR
This paper investigates the properties and clustering of neutral hydrogen (HI) at redshifts up to 5 using advanced simulations, providing insights into HI distribution, bias, velocities, and implications for 21cm intensity mapping.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive analysis of HI abundance, clustering, and velocity properties across redshifts, highlighting new secondary bias and validating perturbative methods for modeling HI clustering.
Findings
Most HI resides in halos with circular velocities >30 km/s.
HI bias becomes non-linear at small scales at high redshift.
Clustering of HI can be modeled accurately with perturbative approaches.
Abstract
[Abridged] We study the abundance and clustering properties of HI at redshifts using TNG100, a large state-of-the-art magneto-hydrodynamic simulation of a 75 Mpc/h box size. We show that most of the HI lies within dark matter halos and quantify the average HI mass hosted by halos of mass M at redshift z. We find that only halos with circular velocities larger than 30 km/s contain HI. While the density profiles of HI exhibit a large halo-to-halo scatter, the mean profiles are universal across mass and redshift. The HI in low-mass halos is mostly located in the central galaxy, while in massive halos is concentrated in the satellites. We show that the HI and matter density probability distribution functions differ significantly. Our results point out that for small halos the HI bulk velocity goes in the same direction and has the same magnitude as the halo peculiar…
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