Redshift-space 21-cm bispectrum multipoles as an SKA-era gravity test in the post-reionization Universe
Sourav Pal, Debanjan Sarkar

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of the redshift-space 21-cm bispectrum multipoles as a novel observational probe for testing gravity theories beyond $ ext{Lambda}$CDM in the post-reionization Universe, using SKA-era surveys.
Contribution
It introduces a perturbative framework for the 21-cm bispectrum multipoles and forecasts their detectability and sensitivity to modified gravity with SKA-like surveys.
Findings
Lowest multipoles dominate the observable information.
Higher-order modes are strongly suppressed.
Modified gravity signals are strongest in specific triangle configurations.
Abstract
The redshifted 21-cm line from neutral hydrogen () enables volumetric intensity mapping of large-scale structure in the post-reionization Universe. In anticipation of \texttt{SKA-MID}'s wide redshift coverage and high signal-to-noise clustering measurements, we study the redshift-space 21-cm bispectrum and its spherical-harmonic multipoles as probes of anisotropic non-linear structure formation and departures from General Relativity. Using a tree-level perturbative description for the 21-cm brightness-temperature field in redshift space, and adopting the Hu--Sawicki model as a representative modified-gravity scenario, we forecast the detectability of configuration-dependent signatures with an \texttt{SKA-MID}--like survey. We derive the bispectrum-multipole covariance including sample variance and thermal noise and evaluate the expected signal-to-noise of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
