Detecting the cosmic 21 cm signal from Epoch of Reionization (EoR) has always
been a difficult task. Although the Galactic foreground can be regarded as a
smooth power-law spectrum, due to the chromaticity of the antenna, additional
structure will be introduced into the global spectrum, making the polynomial
fitting algorithm perform poorly. In this paper, we introduce an improved
polynomial fitting algorithm - the Vari-Zeroth-Order Polynomial (VZOP) fitting
and use it to fit the simulation data. This algorithm is developed for the
upcoming Low-frequency Anechoic Chamber Experiment (LACE), yet it is a general
method suitable for application in any single antenna-based global 21 cm signal
experiment. VZOP defines a 24-hour averaged beam model that brings information
about the antenna beam into the polynomial model. Assuming that the beam can be
measured, VZOP can successfully recover the 21 cm absorption feature, even if
the beam is extremely frequency-dependent. In real observations, due to various
systematics, the corrected measured beam contains residual errors that are not
completely random. Assuming the errors are frequency-dependent, VZOP is capable
of recovering the 21 cm absorption feature even when the error reaches 10%.
Even in the most extreme scenario where the errors are completely random, VZOP
can at least give a fitting result that is not worse than the common polynomial
fitting. In conclusion, the fitting effect of VZOP depends on the structure of
the error and the accuracy of the beam measurement.Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA