Mapping Cosmological Signal Scales to Beam Calibration Requirements in 21cm Experiments and Implications for Near-Field Measurement
Daniel C. Jacobs

TL;DR
This paper presents a new method to determine beam calibration requirements for 21cm cosmology experiments, emphasizing the importance of near-field measurements due to large reflection scales and environmental interactions.
Contribution
It introduces an instrument-agnostic approach to calculate calibration bounds based on cosmological signal scales and noise, guiding near-field measurement needs.
Findings
Reflection scales for cosmological structures are around 100 m.
Far field distance constraints imply ground-based transmitters are near the horizon.
Near-field measurements are essential for accurate antenna pattern calibration.
Abstract
Instruments targeting 21~cm emission at high redshifts need a spectral dynamic range of better than ten thousand to distinguish the 21~cm background against bright foregrounds. Systematics arising from the antenna pattern are a leading limitation for current instruments and must be addressed in future experiments. Antenna pattern measurements could help reach this precision. Pattern measurements are complicated by the large scale of the instruments and interaction with the local environment. In-situ beam mapping methods have been investigated but the required accuracy remains ill defined. One consideration is whether the calibration source is in the far field. Near field measurements require more elaborate measurement and such an expense must be well motivated. The far field distance is set by the effective size of the antenna. Reflections and interactions with surroundings extend the…
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