1 research outputs found
Demonstrating the Feasibility of Line Intensity Mapping Using Mock Data of Galaxy Clustering from Simulations
Visbal & Loeb (2010) have shown that it is possible to measure the clustering
of galaxies by cross correlating the cumulative emission from two different
spectral lines which originate at the same redshift. Through this cross
correlation, one can study galaxies which are too faint to be individually
resolved. This technique, known as intensity mapping, is a promising probe of
the global properties of high redshift galaxies. Here, we test the feasibility
of such measurements with synthetic data generated from cosmological dark
matter simulations. We use a simple prescription for associating galaxies with
dark matter halos and create a realization of emitted radiation as a function
of angular position and wavelength over a patch of the sky. This is then used
to create synthetic data for two different hypothetical instruments, one aboard
the Space Infrared Telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics (SPICA) and another
consisting of a pair of ground based radio telescopes designed to measure the
CO(1-0) and CO(2-1) emission lines. We find that the line cross power spectrum
can be measured accurately from the synthetic data with errors consistent with
the analytical prediction of Visbal & Loeb (2010). Removal of astronomical
backgrounds and masking bright line emission from foreground contaminating
galaxies do not prevent accurate cross power spectrum measurements.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, Submitted to JCA