The Tianlai cylinder array is a pathfinder for developing and testing 21cm
intensity mapping techniques. In this paper, we use numerical simulation to
assess how its measurement is affected by thermal noise and the errors in
calibration and map-making process, and the error in the sky map reconstructed
from a drift scan survey. Here we consider only the single frequency,
unpolarized case. The beam is modelled by fitting to the electromagnetic
simulation of the antenna, and the variations of the complex gains of the array
elements are modelled by Gaussian processes. Mock visibility data is generated
and run through our data processing pipeline. We find that the accuracy of the
current calibration is limited primarily by the absolute calibration, where the
error comes mainly from the approximation of a single dominating point source.
We then studied the m-mode map-making with the help of Moore-Penrose inverse.
We find that discarding modes with singular values smaller than a threshold
could generate visible artifacts in the map. The impacts of the residue
variation of the complex gain and thermal noise are also investigated. The
thermal noise in the map varies with latitude, being minimum at the latitude
passing through the zenith of the telescope. The angular power spectrum of the
reconstructed map show that the current Tianlai cylinder pathfinder, which has
a shorter maximum baseline length in the North-South direction, can measure
modes up to l≲2πbNS/λ∼200 very well, but would
lose a significant fraction of higher angular modes when noise is present.
These results help us to identify the main limiting factors in our current
array configuration and data analysis procedure, and suggest that the
performance can be improved by reconfiguration of the array feed positions.Comment: 25 pages, 18 figures, RAA accepte