Probing the large-scale structure with 21cm-galaxy cross-bispectrum: Estimates from simulations and forecasts for upcoming cosmological surveys
Abstract
The redshifted 21cm signal from the post-reionization epoch is highly non-Gaussian; thus, higher-order statistics, such as the bispectrum, are required to extract this non-Gaussian information. However, high-signal-to-noise ratio detection of the 21cm auto-bispectrum will be hindered by the presence of residual systematics. Cross-correlating the 21cm signal with galaxies offers a promising path to suppress this uncertainty from residual systematics and potentially increase the signal-to-noise ratio. We present a comprehensive analysis of the HI-galaxy cross-bispectrum using the predictions of theoretical galaxy evolution models defined on large cosmological volumes. Our analysis includes the cross-bispectrum for different triangle sizes and shapes, as well as for different combinations of the HI and galaxy fields. We forecast the detectability of the 21cm-galaxy cross-bispectrum at redshift z≈1 with Euclid-like galaxy survey and SKA-Mid observations in both interferometric and single-dish modes of survey. We find that the 21cm-galaxy cross-bispectrum shows enhanced detectability compared to the 21cm auto-bispectrum for all unique triangles in the presence of instrumental noise for observations in interferometric mode. We forecast a 10σ detection of cross-bispectrum for squeezed-limit triangles and a 100σ detection for all shapes combined for scales 0.2~Mpc-1≤ k1 ≤ 0.9~Mpc-1 with 100 hours of SKA-Mid observations per pointing. However, the detectability of the cross-bispectrum for large scales (k1 < 0.1~Mpc-1), which is accessible with the single-dish mode of survey, is limited by cosmic variance. Our analysis presents a first step towards an end-to-end analysis pipeline for the future observations of the 21cm-galaxy cross-bispectrum.
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