Detection of Cosmic Structures using the Bispectrum Phase. II. First Results from Application to Cosmic Reionization Using the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array
Nithyanandan Thyagarajan, Chris L. Carilli, Bojan Nikolic, James Kent,, Andrei Mesinger, Nicholas S. Kern, Gianni Bernardi, Siyanda Matika, Zara, Abdurashidova, James E. Aguirre, Paul Alexander, Zaki S. Ali, Yanga Balfour,, Adam P. Beardsley, Tashalee S. Billings, Judd D. Bowman

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a calibration-independent technique using bispectrum phase to constrain the epoch of reionization's hydrogen signal with HERA data, providing initial upper limits on the IGM brightness temperature.
Contribution
It introduces and applies the bispectrum phase method to real HERA data, offering an alternative approach to detect EoR signals without requiring high-precision calibration.
Findings
Placed upper limits on IGM brightness temperature at z=7.7
Confirmed the dynamic range needed is similar to standard methods
Indicated potential for improved sensitivity with more data
Abstract
Characterizing the epoch of reionization (EoR) at via the redshifted 21 cm line of neutral Hydrogen (HI) is critical to modern astrophysics and cosmology, and thus a key science goal of many current and planned low-frequency radio telescopes. The primary challenge to detecting this signal is the overwhelmingly bright foreground emission at these frequencies, placing stringent requirements on the knowledge of the instruments and inaccuracies in analyses. Results from these experiments have largely been limited not by thermal sensitivity but by systematics, particularly caused by the inability to calibrate the instrument to high accuracy. The interferometric bispectrum phase is immune to antenna-based calibration and errors therein, and presents an independent alternative to detect the EoR HI fluctuations while largely avoiding calibration systematics. Here, we provide a…
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