Multi-frequency angular power spectrum of the 21~cm signal from the Epoch of Reionisation using the Murchison Widefield Array

Abstract

The Multi-frequency Angular Power Spectrum (MAPS) is an alternative to spherically-averaged power spectra, and computes local fluctuations in the angular power spectrum without need for line-of-sight spectral transform. To test different approaches to MAPS and treatment of the foreground contamination, and compare with the spherically-averaged power spectrum, and the single-frequency angular power spectrum. We apply the MAPS to 110~hours of data in z=6.2-7.5 obtained for the Murchison Widefield Array Epoch of Reionisation experiment to compute the statistical power of 21~cm brightness temperature fluctuations. In the presence of bright foregrounds, a filter is applied to remove large-scale modes prior to MAPS application, significantly reducing MAPS power due to systematics. The MAPS shows a contrast of 102--103 to a simulated 21~cm cosmological signal for spectral separations of 0--4~MHz after application of the filter, reflecting results for the spherically-averaged power spectrum. The single-frequency angular power spectrum is also computed. At z=7.5 and l=200, we find an angular power of 53~mK2, exceeding a simulated cosmological signal power by a factor of one thousand. Residual spectral structure, inherent to the calibrated data, and not spectral leakage from large-scale modes, is the dominant source of systematic power bias. The single-frequency angular power spectrum yields slightly poorer results compared with the spherically-averaged power spectrum, having applied a spectral filter to reduce foregrounds. Exploration of other filters may improve this result, along with consideration of wider bandwidths.

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