Satellite Cooling System Breakthrough Developed By
Lockheed Martin Space Systems
Dec. 4, 2013
Scientists and engineers
at the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center
(ATC) have developed the lightest satellite
cryocooler (cooling system) ever built. The
breakthrough is seen as a game-changer in the design
of affordable, advanced-technology flight systems,
as it costs up to ten
thousand dollars a pound for a satellite to
orbit the Earth.
Known as a
microcryocooler, the new cooling system weighs
approximately 11 ounces, three times lighter than
its predecessor, and is expected to have an
operating life of at least ten years. The
microcryocooler operates like a refrigerator,
drawing heat out of sensor systems and delivering
highly efficient cooling to small science satellites
orbiting the Earth and on missions to the outer
planets.
"Temperatures as low as
-320 F are required for infrared instruments and the
coolers must operate with minimum power and long
lifetimes," said
Ted Nast,
Lockheed Martin fellow at the ATC in
Palo Alto. "That is why we constantly
pursue a deeper understanding of the dynamic effects
of temperature on cutting-edge technology and
develop new systems, like our microcryocooler, that
will perform successfully within the demands and
constraints presented by severe, operational thermal
environments."