1 / 29

Hydrogen 21cm Cosmology

Hydrogen 21cm Cosmology. Tzu-Ching Chang (ASIAA) Ue-Li Pen, Kiyo Masui (CITA) Jeff Peterson, Kevin Bandura, Tabitha Voytek, Aravind Natarajan (CMU) Pat McDonald (LBNL) Victor Liao (ASIAA). The initial condition.

long
Download Presentation

Hydrogen 21cm Cosmology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hydrogen 21cm Cosmology Tzu-Ching Chang (ASIAA) Ue-Li Pen, Kiyo Masui (CITA) Jeff Peterson, Kevin Bandura, Tabitha Voytek, Aravind Natarajan (CMU) Pat McDonald (LBNL) Victor Liao (ASIAA)

  2. The initial condition • Cosmic Microwave Background fluctuations of 10-5 at z~1100 (surface of last-scattering) WMAP

  3. HEDEX

  4. Dark Energy • Dominates the current energy budget of the Universe • Causes accelerated expansion • Modifies growth of structure • Unknown origins • Most prosaic “explanation” is a cosmological constant • Well established observationally (e.g. SNe) • A sensitive probe - Baryon Acoustic Oscillation

  5. Baryon Acoustic Oscillations • Sound waves in the photon-baryon plasma in the early universe propagate from density perturbations; they freeze out when universe transited from radiation to matter domination (recombination). • Thus they have a characteristic scale of 100 h-1Mpc (~150 Mpc), corresponding to the sound horizon at recombination at z~1100. Courtesy of D. Eisenstein

  6. Baryon Acoustic Oscillation • A more subtle feature when superposed on a complex density field

  7. The oscillation peaks and troughs on the CMB power spectrum are obvious

  8. More subtle on the galaxy distribution at late times (z~0.35) • Sloan Digital Sky Survey

  9. It causes a slight peak in the galaxy correlation function (z~0.35) Eisenstein+ 05

  10. The oscillation peaks and troughs on the large-scale matter power spectrum Reid+ 10

  11. Why is Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) interesting? • It is a direct demonstration of the gravitational instability paradigm: a feature we see in the CMB 380,000 years after the Big Bang is also seen in an evolved state in the present-day Universe, 13.6 Gyrs after. • The scale of the feature is fixed: it is determined by the scale of the sound horizon at recombination, therefore by the physics in the early Universe. It is a “standard ruler”, and thus is a direct constraint on the geometry of the Universe. • We probe dark energy via its evolution on the expansion rate of the Universe. BAO and CMB, both standard rules, provide an excellent measurement of dark energy properties.

  12. BAO - great tool for precision cosmology Komatsu+ 08

  13. BAO Measurements • BAO feature is present in the distribution of large-scale structure • Can be quantified by imprints on the large-scale matter power spectrum • Galaxies are tracers of large-scale structure; traditionally, we need to measure the 3D position of millions of galaxies in a redshift survey (e.g. SDSS) • Here we propose an alternative: 21-cm

  14. 21cm Line Picture from C. Hirata • Ground-state spin-flip hyperfine transition of neutral hydrogen • Hydrogen: most abundant element, optically thin • Line transition: Probe 3D structure of the Universe • Can be seen in absorption or emission against • the CMB, depending on the spin temperature: • Ts > Tcmb: emission (z < 10) • Ts < Tcmb: absorption ( ~15? < z <~ 150) • Brightness Temperature: 300

  15. The 21cm universe • HI 21cm radiation observable up to z~150 • Up to 1016 modes to z~50(Hubble/Jeans)3 • Physics: Lensing, gravity waves, primordial NG, BAO, AP (Pen 04, Loeb & Zaldarriaga 04, Lewis & Challinor 07, etc.) • Astrophysics: EoR, galaxy formation & evolution • Experiment Now • EoR: GMRT, LOFAR, MWA, PAPER, 21CMA • BAO: GBT, CRT, CHIME EOR LSS SDSS Tegmark & Zaldarriaga 08

  16. 10 21cm Large-Scale Structure 1 Z • Large-scale HI temperature fluctuation; CMB-like, in 3D • Observed frequency: f = 1420/(1+z) MHz • 0.5<z<2.5, HI traces under-lying matter distribution, can be used to measure Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (100 Mpc scale) => dark energy • 6<z<10, Epoch of Reionization, ~20-50 Mpc scale, HI shows tomographic history of reionization => astrophysics M. White LSS; BAO EOR

  17. 21cm emission on galaxy scales • Due to small emissivity, HI in emission is difficult to detect. • Previously, HI direct detection at z~0.2 (Verheijen et al 2007), stacking at z~0.3 (Lah et al. 2007); both on galaxy scales.

  18. 21cm Intensity Mapping • “Intensity Mapping”(Chang et al 2008, Wyithe & Loeb 2008): instead of HI associated with galaxies, interested in HI associated with large-scale structure => measure the collective HI emission from a large region, more massive and luminous, without spatially resolving down to galaxy scales. • Measurement of spatially diffused spectral line, in the confusion-limited regime • Brightness temperature fluctuations on the sky: just like CMB temperature field, but in 3D • Low angular resolution redshift survey: economical

  19. RFI, Galactic Synchrotron foregrounds > 103 signal • HI content, distribution at high-z uncertain 21cm Observational Challenges: Haslam Map at 408 MHz

  20. Green Bank Telescope

  21. Observing HI Large-scale Structure at GBT • Green Bank Telescope: 100 meter in diameter; largest steerable single dish • Observed at 670-910 MHz (0.53<z<1.1) at two of the DEEP2 fields 2 x (2 x 0.5) deg2 for ~25 hours • DEEP2 survey: optical redshift survey by the Keck Telescope, ~50,000 redshifts 0.7<z<1.3 • Cross-correlation of HI & optical, probing 0.53 < z < 1.1 • Spatial resolution: Beam FWHM ~ 15’ => 9 h-1Mpc at z~0.8 • Spectral resolution ~ 24 kHz, rebinned to ~500 kHz => 2 h-1Mpc • Resolution element ~ (9 h-1Mpc)3

  22. HI content at z=0.8Cross-correlating GBT HI & DEEP2 optical galaxies at z ~ 0.7-1.1 GBT radio continuum sources + HI GBT HI (after SVD foreground subtraction) DEEP2 density

  23. HI content at z=0.8Cross-correlating GBT HI & DEEP2 optical galaxies at z ~ 0.7-1.1 • Measure HI & optical cross-correlation on 9 Mpc (spatial) x 2 Mpc (redshift) comoving scales • HI brightness temperature on these scales at z=0.8: • T = 157 ± 42 μK • ΩHI r b = (5.5 ± 1.5) x 10-4 • Highest-redshift detection of HI in emission at 4-sigma statistical significance. Chang, Pen, Bandura, Peterson, in Nature 2010

  24. Work in Progress: HI auto-correlation at z=0.8Auto- & Cross-correlating GBT HI & zCOSMOS galaxies at z ~ 0.5-1.1 GBT radio continuum sources + HI GBT HI (after SVD foreground subtraction) zCOSMOSdensity

  25. Next Step: HI Power spectrum at z~1 Masui et al.

  26. HI BAO Experiment Prospects • HI Intensity Mapping Experiment: 40,000m2 collecting area, 100 hrs of observation - competitive to DETF stage III experiment Chang, Pen, Peterson, McDonald 2008

  27. 21cm at z~1: current status • HI cross-correlation (with DEEP2 optical galaxies): measured at z~0.8: abundant HI at z~1; HI traces large-scale structure • HI auto-correlation at z~0.8: GBT on zCOSMOS field • HI large-scale structure redshift-space distortion: 50 deg, 300 hrs at GBT, observation and data analysis in progress (caution: foreground, calibration issues..) • Looking to build a survey instrument for Baryon Acoustic Oscillation measurement (e.g.,Chang et al. 08, Wyithe & Loeb 08, Seo et al. 10): large collecting area, compact configuration, wide-field survey (~104 m2) covering 0.5<z<2.5 (400-900 MHz, df~0.5 MHz), resolution ~10’ (10 comoving Mpc)

  28. Conclusion • BAO is a powerful tool for precision measurement of dark energy properties • 21-cm line is a promising large-scale structure tracer at low redshifts, yielding BAO measurements • 21-cm would be a good probe of the observable universe.

More Related