The Tianlai Dish Pathfinder Array: design, operation and performance of a prototype transit radio interferometer

11 Nov 2020  ·  Fengquan Wu, Jixia Li, Shifan Zuo, Xuelei Chen, Santanu Das, John P. Marriner, Trevor M. Oxholm, Anh Phan, Albert Stebbins, Peter T. Timbie, Reza Ansari, Jean-Eric Campagne, Zhiping Chen, Yanping Cong, Qizhi Huang, Yichao Li, Tao Liu, Yingfeng Liu, Chenhui Niu, Calvin Osinga, Olivier Perdereau, Jeffrey B. Peterson, Huli Shi, Gage Siebert, Shijie Sun, Haijun Tian, Gregory S. Tucker, Qunxiong Wang, Rongli Wang, Yougang Wang, Yanlin Wu, Yidong Xu, Kaifeng Yu, Zijie Yu, Jiao Zhang, Juyong Zhang, Jialu Zhu ·

The Tianlai Dish Pathfinder Array is a radio interferometer designed to test techniques for 21~cm intensity mapping in the post-reionization universe as a means for measuring large-scale cosmic structure. It performs drift scans of the sky at constant declination. We describe the design, calibration, noise level, and stability of this instrument based on the analysis of about $\sim 5 \%$ of 6,200 hours of on-sky observations through October, 2019. Beam pattern determinations using drones and the transit of bright sources are in good agreement, and compatible with electromagnetic simulations. Combining all the baselines, we make maps around bright sources and show that the array behaves as expected. A few hundred hours of observations at different declinations have been used to study the array geometry and pointing imperfections, as well as the instrument noise behaviour. We show that the system temperature is below 80~K for most feed antennas, and that noise fluctuations decrease as expected with integration time, at least up to a few hundred seconds. Analysis of long integrations, from 10 nights of observations of the North Celestial Pole, yielded visibilities with amplitudes of 20-30~mK, consistent with the expected signal from the NCP radio sky with $<10\,$mK precision for $1 ~\mathrm{MHz} \times 1~ \mathrm{min}$ binning. Hi-pass filtering the spectra to remove smooth spectrum signal yields a residual consistent with zero signal at the $0.5\,$mK level.

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Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics