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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/24696
Title: | Foregrounds in Wide-field Redshifted 21 cm Power Spectra | Authors: | Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan Jacobs, Daniel C. Bowman, Judd D. Barry, N. Beardsley, A. P. BERNARDI, GIANNI Briggs, F. Cappallo, R. J. Carroll, P. Corey, B. E. de Oliveira-Costa, A. Dillon, Joshua S. Emrich, D. Ewall-Wice, A. Feng, L. Goeke, R. Greenhill, L. J. Hazelton, B. J. Hewitt, J. N. Hurley-Walker, N. Johnston-Hollitt, M. Kaplan, D. L. Kasper, J. C. Kim, Han-Seek Kittiwisit, P. Kratzenberg, E. Lenc, E. Line, J. Loeb, A. Lonsdale, C. J. Lynch, M. J. McKinley, B. McWhirter, S. R. Mitchell, D. A. Morales, M. F. Morgan, E. Neben, A. R. Oberoi, D. Offringa, A. R. Ord, S. M. Paul, Sourabh Pindor, B. Pober, J. C. Prabu, T. Procopio, P. Riding, J. Rogers, A. E. E. Roshi, A. Udaya Shankar, N. Sethi, Shiv K. Srivani, K. S. Subrahmanyan, R. Sullivan, I. S. Tegmark, M. Tingay, S. J. Trott, C. M. Waterson, M. Wayth, R. B. Webster, R. L. Whitney, A. R. Williams, A. Williams, C. L. Wu, C. Wyithe, J. S. B. |
Issue Date: | 2015 | Journal: | THE ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL | Number: | 804 | Issue: | 1 | First Page: | 14 | Abstract: | Detection of 21 cm emission of H i from the epoch of reionization, at redshifts z\gt 6, is limited primarily by foreground emission. We investigate the signatures of wide-field measurements and an all-sky foreground model using the delay spectrum technique that maps the measurements to foreground object locations through signal delays between antenna pairs. We demonstrate interferometric measurements are inherently sensitive to all scales, including the largest angular scales, owing to the nature of wide-field measurements. These wide-field effects are generic to all observations but antenna shapes impact their amplitudes substantially. A dish-shaped antenna yields the most desirable features from a foreground contamination viewpoint, relative to a dipole or a phased array. Comparing data from recent Murchison Widefield Array observations, we demonstrate that the foreground signatures that have the largest impact on the H i signal arise from power received far away from the primary field of view. We identify diffuse emission near the horizon as a significant contributing factor, even on wide antenna spacings that usually represent structures on small scales. For signals entering through the primary field of view, compact emission dominates the foreground contamination. These two mechanisms imprint a characteristic pitchfork signature on the “foreground wedge” in Fourier delay space. Based on these results, we propose that selective down-weighting of data based on antenna spacing and time can mitigate foreground contamination substantially by a factor of ∼100 with negligible loss of sensitivity. | Acknowledgments: | This work was supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) through award AST-1109257. D.C.J. is supported by an NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Postdoctoral Fellowship under award AST-1401708. J.C.P. is supported by an NSF Astronomy and Astrophysics Fellowship under award AST-1302774. This work makes use of the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory, operated by CSIRO. We acknowledge the Wajarri Yamatji people as the traditional owners of the Observatory site. Support for the MWA comes from the NSF (awards: AST-0457585, PHY-0835713, CAREER-0847753, and AST-0908884), the Australian Research Council (LIEF grants LE0775621 and LE0882938), the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research (grant FA9550-0510247), and the Centre for All-sky Astrophysics (an Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence funded by grant CE110001020). Support is also provided by the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, the MIT School of Science, the Raman Research Institute, the Australian National University, and the Victoria University of Wellington (via grant MED-E1799 from the New Zealand Ministry of Economic Development and an IBM Shared University Research Grant). The Australian Federal government provides additional support via the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy, Education Investment Fund, and the Australia India Strategic Research Fund, and Astronomy Australia Limited, under contract to Curtin University. We acknowledge the iVEC Petabyte Data Store, the Initiative in Innovative Computing and the CUDA Center for Excellence sponsored by NVIDIA at Harvard University, and the International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research (ICRAR), a Joint Venture of Curtin University and The University of Western Australia, funded by the Western Australian State government. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12386/24696 | URL: | https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/0004-637X/804/1/14 | ISSN: | 0004-637X | DOI: | 10.1088/0004-637X/804/1/14 | Bibcode ADS: | 2015ApJ...804...14T | Fulltext: | open |
Appears in Collections: | 1.01 Articoli in rivista |
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