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Intensity mapping of the H I 21 cm line and the CO 2.61 mm line from the epoch of reionization has emerged as powerful, complementary, probes of the high-redshift Universe. However, both maps and their cross-correlation are dominated by foregrounds. We propose a new analysis by which the signal is unbiased by foregrounds, i.e. it can be measured without foreground mitigation. We construct the antisymmetric part of two-point cross-correlation between intensity maps of the H I 21 cm line and the CO 2.61 mm line, arising because the statistical fluctuations of two fields have different evolution in time. We show that the sign of this new signal can distinguish model-independently whether inside-out reionization happens during some interval of time. More importantly, within the framework of the excursion set model of reionization, we demonstrate that the slope of the dipole of H I-CO cross-power spectrum at large scales is linear to the rate of change of global neutral fraction of hydrogen in a manner independent of reionization parameters, until the slope levels out near the end of reionization, but this trend might possibly depend on the framework of reionization modelling. The H I-CO dipole may be a smoking-gun probe for the speed of reionization, or standard speedometer for cosmic reionization. Observations of this new signal will unveil the global reionization history from the midpoint to near the completion of reionization.
The cross-correlation between fluctuations in the electron scattering optical depth $tau_{rm es}$ as probed by future Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) experiments, and fluctuations in the 21cm differential brightness temperature $Delta T_{rm 21cm}$
Current data indicate that the reionization of the Universe was complete by redshift z~6-7, and while the sources responsible for this process have yet to be identified, star-forming galaxies are often considered the most likely candidates. However,
Current and future generations of intensity mapping surveys promise dramatic improvements in our understanding of galaxy evolution and large-scale structure. An intensity map provides a census of the cumulative emission from all galaxies in a given r
Intensity mapping of the HI 21 cm line and the CO 2.61 mm line from the epoch of reionization has emerged as powerful, complementary, probes of the high-redshift Universe. However, both maps and their cross-correlation are dominated by foregrounds. W
Following the first two annual intensity mapping workshops at Stanford in March 2016 and Johns Hopkins in June 2017, we report on the recent advances in theory, instrumentation and observation that were presented in these meetings and some of the opp