论文标题
表征EOR前景:325 MHz的Lockman孔区域的研究
Characterizing EoR foregrounds: A study of the Lockman Hole Region at 325 MHz
论文作者
论文摘要
当前和即将到来的最敏感望远镜的关键科学目标之一是从宇宙黎明和电离时期发现了红移21厘米的信号。检测的成功依赖于准确的前景建模来从数据集中删除。本文介绍了洛克曼孔区域中天体物理源的表征。 Using 325 MHz data obtained from the GMRT, a $6^\circ \times 6^\circ$ mosaiced map is produced with an RMS reaching 50 $μ$Jy $\mathrm{beam}^{-1}$.创建了一个包含6186个源的源目录,并且欧几里得归一化的差异源数量是从中得出的,与以前的观察结果以及模拟一致。源目录的详细比较也与先前的发现 - 在较低和更高频率下。使用锥形网格估计量,确定了三种不同的银河纬度的分散银乳糖同步子发射的角功率谱(AP)。 aps的值在$ \ sim $ 1 mk $^2 $ to $ \ sim $ \ sim $ 100 mk $^2 $之间。拟合形式$ a \ ell^{ - β} $的功率定律可在所考虑的纬度上变化$ a $ a $ a $ a和$β$的值。本文首次证明了在非常高银河系位置弥漫发射的幂律指数的变化。它遵循了在银河平面附近的位置相同的趋势,因此强调了需要低频观测来开发更好的弥漫发射模型。
One of the key science goals for the most sensitive telescopes, both current and upcoming, is the detection of the redshifted 21-cm signal from the Cosmic Dawn and Epoch of Reionization. The success of detection relies on accurate foreground modeling for their removal from data sets. This paper presents the characterization of astrophysical sources in the Lockman Hole region. Using 325 MHz data obtained from the GMRT, a $6^\circ \times 6^\circ$ mosaiced map is produced with an RMS reaching 50 $μ$Jy $\mathrm{beam}^{-1}$. A source catalog containing 6186 sources is created, and the Euclidean normalized differential source counts have been derived from it, consistent with previous observations as well as simulations. A detailed comparison of the source catalog is also made with previous findings - at both lower and higher frequencies. The angular power spectrum (APS) of the diffuse Galactic synchrotron emission is determined for three different galactic latitudes using the Tapered Gridded Estimator. The values of the APS lie between $\sim$1 mK$^2$ to $\sim$100 mK$^2$. Fitting a power law of the form $A\ell^{-β}$ gives values of $A$ and $β$ varying across the latitudes considered. This paper demonstrates, for the first time, the variation of the power-law index for diffuse emission at very high galactic locations. It follows the same trend that is seen at locations near the galactic plane, thus emphasizing the need for low-frequency observations for developing better models of the diffuse emission.