Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2016
Baseline ripple measurements are of two general kinds, those associated with on-source mechanisms and those with off-source mechanisms (Poulton 1974; Morris 1974). We are here principally concerned with on-source baseline ripples, which occur when a strong continuum radio source is present in the beam. The ripples are particularly conspicuous (Padman 1977, 1978) with a large instrument, such as the Parkes 64-m telescope, where the ripple period is rapid. Here baseline uncertainty becomes especially severe for the detection and study of wide lines, such as the H/He complex and the formamide multiplet near 1.54 GHz. Off-source baseline ripples also occur because of other effects, but in principle they can be removed by subtracting a reference-region spectrum taken while tracking the telescope over the same hour-angle range at the same declination under stable conditions. Improvement of the off-source baseline ripple which arises from stray radiation would also be expected to result from the technique described here.