The Proceedings of the Symposium on Stirlling Cycle
Online ISSN : 2424-2926
2004.8
Session ID : B04
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Development of 20K Cooler for Infrared Astronomical Satellite ASTRO-F
Katsuhiro NarasakiShoji TsunematsuToshio MatsumotoHiroshi MurakamiTakao Nakagawa
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Abstract
A two-stage Stirling cooler has been developed and tested for the infrared astronomical satellite ASTRO-F that is planned to be launched by Japanese M-V rocket in 2005. ASTRO-F has a hybrid cryogenic system that is a combination of superfluid liquid helium and two-stage Stirling coolers. The cooler has a new linear-ball-bearing system for the piston-supporting structure in a compressor. The linear-ball-bearing supporting system achieves the piston clearance seal, the long piston-stroke operation and the low frequency operation. The typical cooling power is 0.2W at 20 K and the total input power to the compressor and the cold head is below 90 W. The engineering, the prototype and the flight models of the cooler have been fabricated and evaluated to verify the capability for ASTRO-F. This paper describes the design of the cooler and the results from verification tests including cooler performance test, thermal vacuum test, vibration test and lifetime test.
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© 2004 The Japan Society of Mechanical Engineers
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