17 research outputs found
Detecting Early Galaxies Through Their 21-cm Signature
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
Observational Manifestations of the First Protogalaxies in the 21 cm Line
The absorption properties of the first low-mass protogalaxies (mini-halos)
forming at high redshifts in the 21-cm line of atomic hydrogen are considered.
The absorption properties of these protogalaxies are shown to depend strongly
on both their mass and evolutionary status. The optical depths in the line
reach 0.1-0.2 for small impact parameters of the line of sight. When a
protogalaxy being compressed, the influence of gas accretion can be seen
manifested in a non-monotonic frequency dependence of the optical depth. The
absorption characteristics in the 21-cm line are determined by the thermal and
dynamical evolution of the gas in protogalaxies. Since the theoretical line
width in the observer's reference frame is 1-6 kHz and the expected separation
between lines 8.4 kHz, the lines from low mass protogalaxies can be resolved
using ongoing and future low frequency interferometers.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figure
Searching for the earliest galaxies in the 21 cm forest
We use a model developed by Xu et al. (2010) to compute the 21 cm line
absorption signatures imprinted by star-forming dwarf galaxies (DGs) and
starless minihalos (MHs). The method, based on a statistical comparison of the
equivalent width (W_\nu) distribution and flux correlation function, allows us
to derive a simple selection criteria for candidate DGs at very high (z >= 8)
redshift. We find that ~ 18% of the total number of DGs along a line of sight
to a target radio source (GRB or quasar) can be identified by the condition
W_\nu < 0; these objects correspond to the high-mass tail of the DG
distribution at high redshift, and are embedded in large HII regions. The
criterion W_\nu > 0.37 kHz instead selects ~ 11% of MHs. Selected candidate DGs
could later be re-observed in the near-IR by the JWST with high efficiency,
thus providing a direct probe of the most likely reionization sources.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures. Accepted for publication in Science in China
Series
21-cm cosmology
Imaging the Universe during the first hundreds of millions of years remains
one of the exciting challenges facing modern cosmology. Observations of the
redshifted 21 cm line of atomic hydrogen offer the potential of opening a new
window into this epoch. This would transform our understanding of the formation
of the first stars and galaxies and of the thermal history of the Universe. A
new generation of radio telescopes is being constructed for this purpose with
the first results starting to trickle in. In this review, we detail the physics
that governs the 21 cm signal and describe what might be learnt from upcoming
observations. We also generalize our discussion to intensity mapping of other
atomic and molecular lines.Comment: 64 pages, 20 figures, submitted to Reports on Progress in Physics,
comments welcom
Foreground simulations for the LOFAR - Epoch of Reionization Experiment
Future high redshift 21-cm experiments will suffer from a high degree of
contamination, due both to astrophysical foregrounds and to non-astrophysical
and instrumental effects. In order to reliably extract the cosmological signal
from the observed data, it is essential to understand very well all data
components and their influence on the extracted signal. Here we present
simulated astrophysical foregrounds datacubes and discuss their possible
statistical effects on the data. The foreground maps are produced assuming 5
deg x 5 deg windows that match those expected to be observed by the LOFAR
Epoch-of-Reionization (EoR) key science project. We show that with the expected
LOFAR-EoR sky and receiver noise levels, which amount to ~52 mK at 150 MHz
after 300 hours of total observing time, a simple polynomial fit allows a
statistical reconstruction of the signal. We also show that the polynomial
fitting will work for maps with realistic yet idealised instrument response,
i.e., a response that includes only a uniform uv coverage as a function of
frequency and ignores many other uncertainties. Polarized galactic synchrotron
maps that include internal polarization and a number of Faraday screens along
the line of sight are also simulated. The importance of these stems from the
fact that the LOFAR instrument, in common with all current interferometric EoR
experiments has an instrumentally polarized response.Comment: 18 figures, 3 tables, accepted to be published in MNRA
Observing Neutral Hydrogen Above Redshift 6: The "Global" Perspective
Above redshift 6, the dominant source of neutral hydrogen in the Universe
shifts from localized clumps in and around galaxies and filaments to a
pervasive, diffuse component of the intergalactic medium (IGM). This transition
tracks the global neutral fraction of hydrogen in the IGM and can be studied,
in principle, through the redshifted 21 cm hyperfine transition line. During
the last half of the reionization epoch, the mean (global) brightness
temperature of the redshifted 21 cm emission is proportional to the neutral
fraction, but at earlier times (10 < z < 25), the mean brightness temperature
should probe the spin temperature of neutral hydrogen in the IGM. Measuring the
(of order 10 mK) mean brightness temperature of the redshifted 21 cm line as a
function of frequency (and hence redshift) would chart the early evolution of
galaxies through the heating and ionizing of the IGM by their stellar
populations. Experiments are already underway to accomplish this task or, at
least, provide basic constraints on the evolution of the mean brightness
temperature. We provide a brief overview of one of these projects, the
Experiment to the Detect the Global EOR Signature (EDGES), and discuss
prospects for future results.Comment: From AIP Conference Proceedings, Volume 1035, 2008, "The Evolution of
Galaxies through the Neutral Hydrogen Window". 3 page
CERN, an adventure in international scientific cooperation
Outlines the history of the Conseil European pour la Recherche Nucleaire (CERN) from its origins in 1951-53 and its establishment on a site on the Swiss-French border near Geneva. Describes the structure of the organisation and discusses the more important policy decisions of the 1960s and 1970s. Concludes by considering future prospects. (0 refs)