Paper
3 November 1980 Long-Life Orbital Operation Of Stirling Cycle Mechanical Refrigerators
L. G. Naes, T. C. Nast
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Four Stirling Cycle mechanical refrigerators are presently providing orbital cooling of two gamma-ray spectrometer instruments.' Each instrument uses two refrigerators that can be operated together or separately. The units have been operating since February 1979 without failure. Performance has degraded due to the gradual leakage of the helium working gas, necessitating operation of two refrigerators simultaneously on one instrument to attain the desired temperatures. The two-stage refrigerators provide 0.3 W at 80 K and 1.5 W at 135 K and have demonstrated the longest duration orbital operation of any mechanical refrigerators to date. A summary of the design, ground tests, and orbital operation is presented for the cryogenic system. Apassive thermal switch was developed during the program, and its operation and performance is summarized. Orbital data that includes working gas pressure, temperatures, and heat rates are presented and compared with ground test data.
© (1980) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
L. G. Naes and T. C. Nast "Long-Life Orbital Operation Of Stirling Cycle Mechanical Refrigerators", Proc. SPIE 0245, Cryogenically Cooled Sensor Technology, (3 November 1980); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.959343
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CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Helium

Switches

Gamma radiation

Spectroscopy

Temperature metrology

Cryogenics

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