Investigating the Contribution of Extended Radio Sources to the Epoch of Reionisation Power Spectrum
J H. Cook, C. M. Trott, J. L. B. Line

TL;DR
This study models extended radio sources' impact on detecting the 21cm signal from the Epoch of Reionisation with the MWA, revealing they significantly hinder detection unless most sources are removed.
Contribution
It introduces bespoke models for extended radio sources and quantifies their effect on the EoR 21cm power spectrum detection.
Findings
Extended sources contribute enough power to hinder 21cm detection.
Removing 50-90% of sources reduces leakage to acceptable levels.
Implications for future radio telescopes like SKA.
Abstract
We investigate the contribution of extended radio sources such as Centaurus A, and Galactic supernova remnants (SNRs) to our ability to detect the statistical signal from the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). These sources are typically ignored because they are in highly attenuated parts of the MWA primary beam, however in aggregate these sources have apparent flux densities of on angular scales we expect to detect the signal. We create bespoke multi-component 2D Gaussian models for Galactic SNRs and for Centaurus A, and simulate the visibilities for two MWA snapshot observations. We grid those visibilities and then Fourier transform them with respect to frequency, averaging them both spherically and cylindrically to produce the 1D and 2D power spectra. We compare the simulated 1D power spectra to the expected…
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