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Published February 20, 2022 | Accepted Version + Published
Journal Article Open

Neutrino Properties with Ground-based Millimeter-wavelength Line Intensity Mapping

Abstract

Line intensity mapping (LIM) is emerging as a powerful technique to map the cosmic large-scale structure and to probe cosmology over a wide range of redshifts and spatial scales. We perform Fisher forecasts to determine the optimal design of wide-field ground-based millimeter-wavelength LIM surveys for constraining properties of neutrinos and light relics. We consider measuring the auto-power spectra of several CO rotational lines (from J = 2–1 to J = 6–5) and the [C ii] fine-structure line in the redshift range of 0.25 < z < 12. We study the constraints with and without interloper lines as a source of noise in our analysis, and for several one-parameter and multiparameter extensions of ΛCDM. We show that LIM surveys deployable this decade, in combination with existing cosmic microwave background (CMB; primary) data, could achieve order-of-magnitude improvements over Planck constraints on N_(eff) and M_ν. Compared to next-generation CMB and galaxy surveys, a LIM experiment of this scale could achieve bounds that are a factor of ∼3 better than those forecasted for surveys such as EUCLID (galaxy clustering), and potentially exceed the constraining power of CMB-S4 by a factor of ∼1.5 and ∼3 for N_(eff) and M_ν, respectively. We show that the forecasted constraints are not substantially affected when enlarging the parameter space, and additionally demonstrate that such a survey could also be used to measure ΛCDM parameters and the dark energy equation of state exquisitely well.

Additional Information

© 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. Original content from this work may be used under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 licence. Any further distribution of this work must maintain attribution to the author(s) and the title of the work, journal citation and DOI. Received 2021 October 11; revised 2021 November 29; accepted 2021 November 29; published 2022 February 18. It is our pleasure to thank Emanuele Castorina for many insightful discussions as well as his feedback on the draft. We also thank Amol Upadhye, Enea Di Dio, and Steen Hannestad for helpful discussions, and Adam Anderson and Clarence Chang for their detailed comments on the draft of this paper. Finally, we thank Ana Diaz for collaborations at the very early stages of this work. A.M.D. is supported by the SNSF project "The Non-Gaussian Universe and Cosmological Symmetries," project number: 200020-178787. A.M.D also acknowledges partial support from Tomalla Foundation for Gravity.

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Published - Moradinezhad_Dizgah_2022_ApJ_926_137.pdf

Accepted Version - 2110.00014.pdf

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023