Keeping Cool: SRON Develops Thermal Calibration System for Deep-Space Telescope

C. de Jonge
SRON, Netherlands

Deep-space telescopes require ultrasensitive detectors and calibration to pick up weak far-infrared signals. The SpicA Far-InfraRed Instrument (SAFARI), an infrared camera that will fly aboard the Space Infrared Telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics (SPICA), has sensors that measure the far-infrared spectrum. The SAFARI system includes a radiation source, needed for calibration, that is so powerful it can throw off the readings. Thus, heat management becomes a vital consideration, as the sensors must be kept at cryogenic temperatures. Stainless steel suspension strings hold the radiation source to a frame, preventing it from contacting other equipment and minimizing heat transfer and vibrations. Chris de Jonge, design engineer at the SRON Netherlands Institute for Space Research, has used COMSOL Multiphysics to aid in the design of this thermally insulating suspension system. He also used his COMSOL simulation results to optimize the geometry of an iris and shutter mechanism inside the calibration system, developing an optimal coil design and minimizing current and heat dissipation.

COMSOL simulation results showing the displacement and magnetic flux density in the coil and blades of SAFARI's iris mechanism.

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