Abstract

Adiabatic Demagnetization Refrigerator (ADR) is an efficient way to obtain sub-Kelvin temperatures in space environments. The SAFARI instrument for the Japanese spaceborne SPICA mission features detectors which will be cooled down to 50mK. This cooling will be done by a hybrid cooler comprising a 300mK sorption stage and a 50mK ADR stage. For this cooler and ADR in general, the main contribution to the overall mass is in the magnetic system and particularly in the magnetic shielding required to keep the stray field within acceptable values. In order to reduce this mass, superconducting materials can be used as active magnetic shields thanks to un-attenuated eddy currents generated while ramping the magnet current. In this way they could reduce the need of heavy ferromagnetic material shields and increase the shielding efficiency to reach very low parasitic values. In the framework of SAFARI we have built a numerical model of a superconductor magnetic shield. The good results regarding the weight gain lead us to an experimental confirmation. In this paper we present an experimental study on MgB2 and NbTi superconducting materials. 2 pairs of rings of typical diameter of 80mm have been tested using a superconducting magnet matching closely the dimensions of the SAFARI ADR cooler. The magnetic shielding measurements have been compared to a numerical model.

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