Interferometric HI intensity mapping: perturbation theory predictions and foreground removal effects

Abstract

We provide perturbation theory predictions for the HI intensity mapping power spectrum multipoles using the Effective Field Theory of Large Scale Structure (EFTofLSS), which should allow us to constrain cosmological parameters exploiting mildly nonlinear scales. Assuming survey specifications typical of proposed interferometric HI intensity mapping experiments like CHORD and PUMA, and realistic ranges of validity for the perturbation theory modelling, we run mock full shape MCMC analyses at a redshift bin centred at z=0.5, and compare with Stage-IV optical galaxy surveys. We include the impact of 21cm foreground removal using simulations-based prescriptions, and quantify the effects on the precision and accuracy of the parameter estimation. We vary 11 parameters in total: 3 cosmological parameters, 7 bias and counterterms parameters, and the HI brightness temperature. Amongst them, the 4 parameters of interest are: the cold dark matter density, ω c, the Hubble parameter, h, the primordial amplitude of the power spectrum, A s, and the linear HI bias, b1. For the best case scenario, we obtain unbiased constraints on all parameters with <3\% errors at 68\% confidence level. When we include the foreground removal effects, the parameter estimation becomes strongly biased for ω c, h, and b1, while A s is less biased (< 2σ). We find that scale cuts k min ≥ 0.03 \, h/Mpc are required to return accurate estimates for ω c and h, at the price of a decrease in the precision, while b1 remains strongly biased. We comment on the implications of these results for real data analyses.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…