Astrophysics and Cosmology with Line-Intensity Mapping [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1903.04496


Line-Intensity Mapping is an emerging technique which promises new insights into the evolution of the Universe, from star formation at low redshifts to the epoch of reionization and cosmic dawn. It measures the integrated emission of atomic and molecular spectral lines from galaxies and the intergalactic medium over a broad range of frequencies, using instruments with aperture requirements that are greatly relaxed relative to surveys for single objects. A coordinated, comprehensive, multi-line intensity-mapping experimental effort can efficiently probe over 80% of the volume of the observable Universe – a feat beyond the reach of other methods. Line-intensity mapping will uniquely address a wide array of pressing mysteries in galaxy evolution, cosmology, and fundamental physics. Among them are the cosmic history of star formation and galaxy evolution, the compositions of the interstellar and intergalactic media, the physical processes that take place during the epoch of reionization, cosmological inflation, the validity of Einstein’s gravity theory on the largest scales, the nature of dark energy and the origin of dark matter.

Read this paper on arXiv…

E. Kovetz, P. Breysse, A. Lidz, et. al.
Wed, 13 Mar 19
105/125

Comments: Astro2020 white paper (submitted to the NASA 2020 astronomy and astrophysics decadal survey)