Constraining the physics of star formation from CIB-cosmic shear cross-correlations
(2022)
Clustering redshifts with the 21cm-galaxy cross-bispectrum
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 516:2 (2022) 3029-3048
Abstract:
The cross-correlation between 21-cm intensity mapping (IM) experiments and photometric surveys of galaxies (or any other cosmological tracer with a broad radial kernel) is severely degraded by the loss of long-wavelength radial modes due to Galactic foreground contamination. Higher-order correlators are able to restore some of these modes due to the non-linear coupling between them and the local small-scale clustering induced by gravitational collapse. We explore the possibility of recovering information from the bispectrum between a photometric galaxy sample and an IM experiment, in the context of the clustering-redshifts technique. We demonstrate that the bispectrum is able to calibrate the redshift distribution of the photometric sample to the required accuracy of future experiments such as the Rubin Observatory, using future single-dish and interferometric 21-cm observations, in situations where the two-point function is not able to do so due to foreground contamination. We also show how this calibration is affected by the photometric redshift width σz,0 and maximum scale kmax. We find that it is important to reach scales $k \gtrsim 0.3\, h\, {\rm Mpc}^{-1}$, with the constraints saturating at around $k\sim 1\, h\, {\rm Mpc}^{-1}$ for next-generation experiments.The impact of the Universe's expansion rate on constraints on modified growth of structure
(2022)
The star formation history in the last 10 billion years from CIB cross-correlations
(2022)
First measurement of projected phase correlations and large-scale structure constraints
(2022)