4.7 Article

Beyond ΛCDM with H I intensity mapping: robustness of cosmological constraints in the presence of astrophysics

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 496, Issue 4, Pages 4115-4126

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/staa1663

Keywords

dark energy; early Universe; large-scale structure of Universe; cosmology: observations; cosmology: theory; radio lines: galaxies

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR) through Rita Levi Montalcini project 'PROMETHEUS - Probing and Relating Observables with Multi-wavelength Experiments to Help Enlightening the Universe's Structure'
  2. 'Departments of Excellence 2018-2022' Grant - MIUR [L. 232/2016]

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Mapping the unresolved intensity of the 21-cm emission of neutral hydrogen (H I) is now regarded as one the most promising tools for cosmological investigation in the coming decades. Here, we investigate, for the first time, extensions of the standard cosmological model, such as modified gravity and primordial non-Gaussianity, taking self-consistently into account. The present constraints on the astrophysics of HI clustering in the treatment of the brightness temperature fluctuations. To understand the boundaries within which results thus obtained can be considered reliable, we examine the robustness of cosmological parameter estimation performed via studies of 21-cm intensity mapping, against our knowledge of the astrophysical processes leading to HI clustering. Modelling of astrophysical effects affects cosmological observables through the relation linking the overall HI mass in a bound object, to the mass of the underlying dark matter halo that hosts it. We quantify the biases in estimates of standard cosmological parameters and those describing modified gravity and primordial non-Gaussianity that are obtained if one misconceives the slope of the relation between HI mass and halo mass, or the lower virial velocity cut-off for a dark matter halo to be able to host HI. Remarkably, we find that astrophysical uncertainties will not affect searches for primordial non-Gaussianity - one of the strongest science cases for HI intensity mapping - despite the signal being deeply linked to the HI bias.

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