轨道(动力学)
多项式的
定轨
订单(交换)
热力学第零定律
数学
大地测量学
遥感
物理
天文
数学分析
航空航天工程
地质学
工程类
卫星
热力学
经济
财务
作者
Tianyang Liu,Jiajun Zhang,Yuan Shi,Jiayin Gu,Quan Guo,Yidong Xu,Furen Deng,Fengquan Wu,Yanping Cong,Xuelei Chen
出处
期刊:Cornell University - arXiv
日期:2024-06-24
标识
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2406.17000
摘要
The cosmic 21 cm signal serves as a crucial probe for studying the evolutionary history of the Universe. However, detecting the 21 cm signal poses significant challenges due to its extremely faint nature. To mitigate the interference from the Earth's radio frequency interference (RFI), the ground and the ionospheric effects, the Discovering the Sky at the Longest Wavelength (DSL) project will deploy a constellation of satellites in Lunar orbit, with its high-frequency daughter satellite tasked with detecting the global 21 cm signal from cosmic dawn and reionization era (CD/EoR). We intend to employ the Vari-Zeroth-Order Polynomial (VZOP) for foreground fitting and subtracting. We have studied the effect of thermal noise, thermal radiation from the Moon, the Lunar reflection, anisotropic frequency-dependent beam, inaccurate antenna beam pattern, and RFI contamination. We discovered that the RFI contamination can significantly affect the fitting process and thus prevent us from detecting the signal. Therefore, experimenting on the far side of the moon is crucial. We also discovered that using VZOP together with DSL, after 1080 orbits around the Moon, which takes about 103 days, we can successfully detect the CD/EoR 21 cm signal.
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