The designs of the first generation of cosmological 21-cm observatories are
split between single dipole experiments which integrate over a large patch of
sky in order to find the global (spectral) signature of reionization, and
interferometers with arcminute-scale angular resolution whose goal is to
measure the 3D power spectrum of ionized regions during reionization. We
examine whether intermediate scale instruments with complete Fourier (uv)
coverage are capable of placing new constraints on reionization. We find that
even without using a full power spectrum analysis, the global redshift of
reionization, z_reion, can in principle be measured from the variance in the
21-cm signal among multiple beams as a function of frequency at a roughly 1
degree angular scale. At this scale, the beam-to-beam variance in the
differential brightness temperature peaks when the average neutral fraction was
around 50%, providing a convenient flag of z_reion. We choose a low angular
resolution of order 1 degree to exploit the physical size of the ionized
regions and maximize the signal-to-noise ratio. Thermal noise, foregrounds, and
instrumental effects should also be manageable at this angular scale, as long
as the uv coverage is complete within the compact core required for
low-resolution imaging. For example, we find that z_reion can potentially be
detected to within a redshift uncertainty of less than around 1 in around 500
hours of integration on the existing MWA prototype (with only 32x16 dipoles),
operating at an angular resolution of around 1 degree and a spectral resolution
of 2.4 MHz.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. Version published in JCAP (appendix removed,
some clarifications and changes to definitions