Predictions for measuring the 21-cm multi-frequency angular power spectrum using SKA-Low
Rajesh Mondal (Sussex), Abinash Kumar Shaw (IIT Kgp), Ilian T. Iliev, (Sussex), Somnath Bharadwaj (IIT Kgp), Kanan K. Datta (Presidency U.), Suman, Majumdar (IIT Indore), Anjan K. Sarkar (RRI), Keri L. Dixon (NYU Abu, Dhabi)

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the feasibility of measuring the 21-cm multi-frequency angular power spectrum during the Epoch of Reionization using SKA-Low, addressing challenges posed by the light-cone effect and foreground contamination.
Contribution
It introduces the use of MAPS as an alternative to the 3D power spectrum for EoR studies and provides detailed forecasts for its detectability with SKA-Low.
Findings
MAPS can be detected at ≥5σ confidence at certain scales with 128 hours of observation.
Foreground effects can be mitigated by avoiding the foreground wedge in analysis.
Large bandwidth observations improve the prospects for EoR 21-cm signal detection.
Abstract
The light-cone (LC) effect causes the mean as well as the statistical properties of the redshifted 21-cm signal to change with frequency (or cosmic time). Consequently, the statistical homogeneity (ergodicity) of the signal along the line of sight (LoS) direction is broken. This is a severe problem particularly during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) when the mean neutral hydrogen fraction () changes rapidly as the universe evolves. This will also pose complications for large bandwidth observations. These effects imply that the 3D power spectrum fails to quantify the entire second-order statistics of the signal as it assumes the signal to be ergodic and periodic along the LoS. As a proper alternative to , we use the multi-frequency angular power spectrum (MAPS) which does not assume the…
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