Detection of Cosmic Structures using the Bispectrum Phase. I. Mathematical Foundations
Nithyanandan Thyagarajan, Chris Carilli

TL;DR
This paper explores the use of bispectrum phase in radio interferometry to detect faint cosmological signals, offering a calibration-insensitive method that complements existing techniques despite some mode-mixing challenges.
Contribution
It establishes the mathematical basis for using bispectrum phase to measure cosmic structures and analyzes its behavior and limitations compared to traditional methods.
Findings
Bispectrum phase is largely immune to calibration errors.
Mode-mixing of foregrounds is more pronounced in bispectrum phase.
Forward-modeling can interpret bispectrum phase results despite limitations.
Abstract
Many low-frequency radio interferometers are aiming to detect very faint spectral signatures from structures at cosmological redshifts, particularly of neutral Hydrogen using its characteristic 21 cm spectral line. Due to the very high dynamic range needed to isolate these faint spectral fluctuations from the very bright foregrounds, spectral systematics from the instrument or the analysis, rather than thermal noise, are currently limiting their sensitivity. Failure to achieve a spectral calibration with fractional inaccuracy will make the detection of the critical cosmic signal unlikely. The bispectrum phase from interferometric measurements is largely immune to this calibration issue. We present a basis to explore the nature of bispectrum phase in the limit of small spectral fluctuations. We establish that they measure the intrinsic dissimilarity in the transverse…
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