Probing the Small-Scale Matter Power Spectrum with Large-Scale 21-cm Data
Julian B. Mu\~noz, Cora Dvorkin, and Francis-Yan Cyr-Racine

TL;DR
This paper forecasts how 21-cm observations during cosmic dawn can probe small-scale matter fluctuations, offering insights into dark matter properties at scales previously difficult to access.
Contribution
It introduces a method to use 21-cm global signal and fluctuations to constrain the matter power spectrum at small scales, especially around k=50 Mpc$^{-1}$, and assesses the potential to test dark matter models.
Findings
21-cm data can measure matter power spectrum at small scales with tens of percent accuracy.
Modes with k=40-80 Mpc$^{-1}$ are most accessible and less degenerate with astrophysics.
Constraints can test warm dark matter masses up to 8-14 keV.
Abstract
The distribution of matter fluctuations in our universe is key for understanding the nature of dark matter and the physics of the early cosmos. Different observables have been able to map this distribution at large scales, corresponding to wavenumbers Mpc, but smaller scales remain much less constrained. The 21-cm line is a promising tracer of early stellar formation, which took place in small haloes (with masses ), formed out of matter overdensities with wavenumbers as large as Mpc. Here we forecast how well both the 21-cm global signal, and its fluctuations, could probe the matter power spectrum during cosmic dawn (). We find that the long-wavelength modes (with Mpc) are highly degenerate with astrophysical parameters, whereas the modes with Mpc are more readily…
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