Polarized Redundant-Baseline Calibration for 21 cm Cosmology Without Adding Spectral Structure [IMA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1712.07212


21 cm cosmology is a promising new probe of the evolution of visible matter in our universe, especially during the poorly-constrained Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of Reionization. However, in order to separate the 21 cm signal from bright astrophysical foregrounds, we need an exquisite understanding of our telescopes so as to avoid adding spectral structure to spectrally-smooth foregrounds. One powerful calibration method relies on repeated simultaneous measurements of the same interferometric baseline to solve for the sky signal and for instrumental parameters simultaneously. However, certain degrees of freedom are not constrained by asserting internal consistency between redundant measurements. In this paper, we review the origin of these “degeneracies” of redundant-baseline calibration, demonstrate how they can source unwanted spectral structure in our measurements, and show how to eliminate that structure. We also generalize redundant calibration to dual-polarization instruments, derive the new degeneracies, and explore the unique challenges to calibration and spectral smoothness presented by a polarized measurement.

Read this paper on arXiv…

J. Dillon, S. Kohn, A. Parsons, et. al.
Thu, 21 Dec 17
65/76

Comments: 12 pages, 3 figures