Towards Optimal Foreground Mitigation Strategies for Interferometric HI Intensity Mapping in the Low-Redshift Universe [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2205.07776


We conduct the first case study towards developing optimal foreground mitigation strategies for neutral hydrogen (HI) intensity mapping using radio interferometers at low redshifts. A pipeline for simulation, foreground mitigation and power spectrum estimation is built, which can be used for ongoing and future surveys using MeerKAT and SKAO. It simulates realistic sky signals to generate visibility data given instrument and observation specifications, which is subsequently used to perform foreground mitigation and power spectrum estimation. A quadratic estimator formalism is developed to estimate the temperature power spectrum in visibility space. Using MeerKAT telescope specifications for observations in the redshift range z~0.25-0.30 corresponding to the MIGHTEE survey, we present a case study where we compare different approaches of foreground mitigation. We find that component separation in visibility space provides a more accurate estimation of HI clustering comparing to foreground avoidance, with the uncertainties being 30% smaller. Power spectrum estimation from image is found to be less robust with larger bias and more information loss when compared to estimation in visibility. We conclude that for z~0.25-0.30, the MIGHTEE survey will be capable of measuring the HI power spectrum from k~0.5 Mpc$^{-1}$ to k~10 Mpc$^{-1}$ with high accuracy. We are the first to show that, at low redshift, component separation in visibility space suppresses foreground contamination at large line-of-sight scales, allowing measurement of HI power spectrum closer to the foreground wedge, crucial for data analysis towards future detections.

Read this paper on arXiv…

Z. Chen, L. Wolz and R. Battye
Tue, 17 May 22
61/95

Comments: 20 pages, 19 figures. Submitted to MNRAS