Digital signal recorders are becoming widely used in several subfields of centimetre-wavelength radio astronomy. We review the benefits and design considerations of such systems and describe the Princeton Mark IV instrument, an implementation designed for coherent-dedispersion pulsar observations. Features of this instrument include corrections for the distortions caused by coarse quantization of the incoming signal, as well as algorithms that effectively excise both narrow-band and broad-band radio frequency interference. Observations at 430 MHz, using the Mark IV system in parallel with a system using a 250-kHz filter bank and incoherent dedispersion, demonstrated timing precision improvement by a factor of 3 or better for typical millisecond pulsars.
CITATION STYLE
Stairs, I. H., Splaver, E. M., Thorsett, S. E., Nice, D. J., & Taylor, J. H. (2000). A baseband recorder for radio pulsar observations. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 314(3), 459–467. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-8711.2000.03306.x
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