4.6 Article

Probing the first stars and black holes in the early Universe with the Dark Ages Radio Explorer (DARE)

Journal

ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH
Volume 49, Issue 3, Pages 433-450

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.asr.2011.10.014

Keywords

Cosmology: first stars; dark ages; reionization; Radio lines: general; Instrumentation: detectors

Funding

  1. NASA Ames Research Center (ARC)
  2. Lunar University Network for Astro-physics Research (LUNAR)
  3. NLSI [NNA09DB30A]

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A concept for a new space-based cosmology mission called the Dark Ages Radio Explorer (DARE) is presented in this paper. DARE's science objectives include: (1) When did the first stars form? (2) When did the first accreting black holes form? (3) When did Reionization begin? (4) What surprises does the end of the Dark Ages hold (e.g., Dark Matter decay)? DARE will use the highly-redshifted hyperfine 21-cm transition from neutral hydrogen to track the formation of the first luminous objects by their impact on the intergalactic medium during the end of the Dark Ages and during Cosmic Dawn (redshifts z = 11-35). It will measure the sky-averaged spin temperature of neutral hydrogen at the unexplored epoch 80-420 million years after the Big Bang, providing the first evidence of the earliest stars and galaxies to illuminate the cosmos and testing our models of galaxy formation. DARE's approach is to measure the expected spectral features in the sky-averaged, redshifted 21-cm signal over a radio bandpass of 40-120 MHz. DARE orbits the Moon for a mission lifetime of 3 years and takes data above the lunar farside, the only location in the inner solar system proven to be free of human-generated radio frequency interference and any significant ionosphere. The science instrument is composed of a low frequency radiometer, including electrically-short, tapered, bi-conical dipole antennas, a receiver, and a digital spectrometer. The smooth frequency response of the antennas and the differential spectral calibration approach using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo technique will be applied to detect the weak cosmic 21-cm signal in the presence of the intense solar system and Galactic foreground emissions. (C) 2011 COSPA R. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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