The BINGO Project V: Further steps in Component Separation and Bispectrum Analysis
Karin S. F. Fornazier, Filipe B. Abdalla, Mathieu Remazeilles, Jordany, Vieira, Alessandro Marins, Elcio Abdalla, Larissa Santos, Jacques, Delabrouille, Eduardo Mericia, Ricardo G. Landim, Elisa G. M. Ferreira,, Luciano Barosi, Francisco A. Brito, Amilcar R. Queiroz

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the BINGO survey can effectively separate the 21cm cosmological signal from foreground contamination using advanced component separation techniques, enabling accurate power spectrum and bispectrum recovery.
Contribution
It introduces a noise-corrected, unbiased component separation method that reduces foreground residuals below the cosmological signal level in simulated BINGO data.
Findings
Foreground residuals can be minimized to noise levels.
The 21cm power spectrum is recoverable across multiple redshifts.
Bispectrum analysis effectively tests residual foreground contamination.
Abstract
Observing the neutral hydrogen distribution across the Universe via redshifted 21cm line intensity mapping constitutes a powerful probe for cosmology. However, the redshifted 21cm signal is obscured by the foreground emission from our Galaxy and other extragalactic foregrounds. This paper addresses the capabilities of the BINGO survey to separate such signals. Specifically, this paper looks in detail at the different residuals left over by foreground components, shows that a noise-corrected spectrum is unbiased, and shows that we understand the remaining systematic residuals by analyzing nonzero contributions to the three-point function. We use the generalized needlet internal linear combination, which we apply to sky simulations of the BINGO experiment for each redshift bin of the survey. We present our recovery of the redshifted 21cm signal from sky simulations of the BINGO…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Electrical and Electromagnetic Research
