2 research outputs found

    Forecasts for Dark Energy Measurements with Future HI Surveys

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    We use two independent methods to forecast the dark energy measurements achievable by combining future galaxy redshift surveys based on the radio HI emission line with Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) data from the {\sl Planck} satellite. In the first method we focus on the `standard ruler' provided by the baryon acoustic oscillation (BAO) length scale. In the second method we utilize additional information encoded in the galaxy power spectrum including galaxy bias from velocity-space distortions and the growth of cosmic structure. We find that a radio synthesis array with about 10 per cent of the collecting area of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA), equipped with a wide (10−100 deg210-100 ~ {\rm deg}^2) field-of-view, would have the capacity to perform a 20,000 deg220{,}000 ~ {\rm deg}^2 redshift survey to a maximum redshift zmax∼0.8z_{\rm max} \sim 0.8 and thereby produce dark energy measurements that are competitive with surveys likely to be undertaken by optical telescopes around 2015. There would then be powerful arguments for adding collecting area to such a `Phase-1' SKA because of the square-law scaling of survey speed with telescope sensitivity for HI surveys, compared to the linear scaling for optical redshift surveys. The full SKA telescope should, by performing a 20,000 deg220{,}000 ~ {\rm deg}^2 HI redshift survey to zmax∼2z_{\rm max} \sim 2 around 2020, yield an accurate measurement of cosmological parameters independent of CMB datasets. Combining CMB ({\sl Planck}) and galaxy power spectrum (SKA) measurements will drive errors in the dark energy equation-of-state parameter ww well below the 1 per cent level. The major systematic uncertainty in these forecasts is the lack of direct information about the mass function of high-redshift HI-emitting galaxies.Comment: 19 pages; 2 tables; 18 figures. accepted by MNRA
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