404 research outputs found

    Probing the Epoch of Early Baryonic Infall Through 21cm Fluctuations

    Full text link
    After cosmological recombination, the primordial hydrogen gas decoupled from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and fell into the gravitational potential wells of the dark matter. The neutral hydrogen imprinted acoustic oscillations on the pattern of brightness fluctuations due to its redshifted 21cm absorption of the CMB. Unlike CMB temperature fluctuations which probe the power spectrum at cosmic recombination, we show that observations of the 21cm fluctuations at z ~ 20-200 can measure four separate fluctuation modes (with a fifth mode requiring very high precision), thus providing a unique probe of the geometry and composition of the universe.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS Letters, accepte

    Measuring the History of Cosmic Reionization using the 21-cm PDF from Simulations

    Get PDF
    The 21-cm PDF (i.e., distribution of pixel brightness temperatures) is expected to be highly non-Gaussian during reionization and to provide important information on the distribution of density and ionization. We measure the 21-cm PDF as a function of redshift in a large simulation of cosmic reionization and propose a simple empirical fit. Guided by the simulated PDF, we then carry out a maximum likelihood analysis of the ability of upcoming experiments to measure the shape of the 21-cm PDF and derive from it the cosmic reionization history. Under the strongest assumptions, we find that upcoming experiments can measure the reionization history in the mid to late stages of reionization to 1-10% accuracy. Under a more flexible approach that allows for four free parameters at each redshift, a similar accuracy requires the lower noise levels of second-generation 21-cm experiments.Comment: 13 pages, 16 figures, submitted to MNRA

    Linear effects of perturbed recombination

    Full text link
    Perturbations in the ionization fraction after recombination affect the Compton cooling of density perturbations. Once the gas temperature starts to decouple from the CMB temperature, ionization fraction perturbations can have a significant influence on the subsequent gas temperature perturbation evolution. This directly affects the 21cm spin temperature of the gas, and also modifies the small-scale baryon perturbation evolution via the difference in baryon pressure. The effect on the gas temperature perturbations can be significant on all scales, and galactic-scale baryon perturbations are modified at the percent level at redshifts z >~ 100 where numerical simulations are typically started.Comment: 5 pages; for more details of effect on 21cm see astro-ph/0702600; code available at http://camb.info/sources

    Detecting Early Galaxies Through Their 21-cm Signature

    Full text link
    New observations over the next few years of the emission of distant objects will help unfold the chapter in cosmic history around the era of the first galaxies. These observations will use the neutral hydrogen emission or absorption at a wavelength of 21-cm as a detector of the hydrogen abundance. We predict the signature on the 21-cm signal of the early generations of galaxies. We calculate the 21-cm power spectrum including two physical effects that were neglected in previous calculations. The first is the redistribution of the UV photons from the first galaxies due to their scattering off of the neutral hydrogen, which results in an enhancement of the 21-cm signal. The second is the presence of an ionized hydrogen bubble near each source, which produces a cutoff at observable scales. We show that the resulting clear signature in the 21-cm power spectrum can be used to detect and study the population of galaxies that formed just 200 million years after the Big Bang.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRAS Let

    Separating out the Alcock-Paczynski Effect on 21cm Fluctuations

    Full text link
    We reconsider the Alcock-Paczynski effect on 21cm fluctuations from high redshift, focusing on the 21cm power spectrum. We show that at each accessible redshift both the angular diameter distance and the Hubble constant can be determined from the power spectrum. Furthermore, this is possible using anisotropies that depend only on linear density perturbations and not on astrophysical sources of 21cm fluctuations. We show that measuring these quantities at high redshift would not just confirm results from the cosmic microwave background but provide appreciable additional sensitivity to cosmological parameters and dark energy.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, MNRAS, revised versio

    Growth of Linear Perturbations before the Era of the First Galaxies

    Full text link
    We calculate the evolution of linear density and temperature perturbations in a universe with dark matter, baryons, and radiation, from cosmic recombination until the epoch of the first galaxies. In addition to gravity, the perturbations are effected by electron scattering with the radiation, by radiation pressure, and by gas pressure. We include the effect of spatial fluctuations in the baryonic sound speed and show that they induce a >10% change in the baryonic density power spectrum on small scales, and a larger change on all scales in the power spectrum of gas temperature fluctuations. A precise calculation of the growth of linear perturbations is essential since they provide the initial conditions for the formation of galaxies and they can also be probed directly via cosmological 21cm fluctuations. We also show that in general the thermal history of the cosmic gas can be measured from 21cm fluctuations using a small-scale anisotropic cutoff due to the thermal width of the 21cm line.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS, accepte

    A possible gravitational lens in the Hubble Deep Field South

    Get PDF
    We model an apparent gravitational lens system HDFS 2232509-603243 in the Hubble Deep Field South. The system consists of a blue V=25 mag arc separated by 0.9 arcsec from a red V=22 mag elliptical galaxy. A mass distribution which follows the observed light distribution with a constant mass-to-light ratio can fit the arc component positions if external shear is added. A good fit is also obtained with simple parameterized models, and all the models predict a forth image fainter than the detection limit. The inferred mass-to-light ratio is roughly 15 in solar units if the lens is at redshift 0.6. Prospects for obtaining spectroscopic redshifts of the elliptical galaxy and the arc are good
    • …
    corecore