Cosmological Implication of Cross-correlation between Galaxy Clustering and 21-cm Line Intensity Mapping
Abstract
The apparent anisotropies of galaxy clustering and 21-cm mapping in redshift space offer a unique opportunity to simultaneously probe cosmic expansion and gravity on cosmological scales through the Alcock-Paczynski (AP) effect and redshift-space distortions (RSD). Although improved theoretical models exist for anisotropic clustering, their applicability is limited by the non-perturbative smearing effect caused by the randomness of relative velocities. Here, we consider an alternative approach using the statistical power of cross-correlation between galaxy clustering and 21-cm line intensity mapping. Based on Fisher matrix analysis, fully incorporating nonlinear RSD, we estimate the benefit of combining both observables. We find that, for spectroscopy surveys like DESI combined with 21-cm line-intensity mapping surveys, constraints on the growth of structure and the cosmic expansion rate are improved by a factor of two relative to the galaxy auto-correlation. Crucially, such an observation can strongly constrain the neutral hydrogen (HI) content OmegaHI to a sub-percent level. This level of precision unlocks the potential of this method to probe post-reionization astrophysics with enhanced precision. It would far surpass existing constraints from stacked 21-cm emission and break the degeneracy between OmegaHI and the HI bias bHI inherent in the linear-regime power-spectrum analysis. This cross-correlation approach effectively compensates for the loss of constraining power when using galaxy clustering alone.
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