Cooldown Strategies and Transient Thermal Simulations for the Simons Observatory
Gabriele Coppi, Zhilei Xu, Aamir Ali, Mark J. Devlin, Simon Dicker,, Nicholas Galitzki, Patricio A. Gallardo, Brian Keating, Michele Limon, Marius, Longu, Andrew J. May, Jeff McMahon, Michael D. Niemack, Jack L., Orlowski-Scherer, Lucio Piccirillo, Giuseppe Puglisi

TL;DR
This paper presents thermal simulation models for the cooling process of the Simons Observatory's large and small aperture telescopes, predicting cooldown times and suggesting improvements for efficiency.
Contribution
It introduces a finite difference simulation code for transient thermal analysis of the observatory's cryostats, providing cooldown time estimates and optimization suggestions.
Findings
LATR cools down in approximately 35 days.
SAT cools down in about one week, meeting design goals.
Additional heat switches could reduce cooldown time for the LATR.
Abstract
The Simons Observatory (SO) will provide precision polarimetry of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) using a series of telescopes which will cover angular scales from arc-minutes to tens of degrees, contain over 60,000 detectors, and observe in frequency bands between 27 GHz and 270 GHz. SO will consist of a six-meter-aperture telescope initially coupled to ~35,000 detectors along with an array of 0.5m aperture refractive cameras, coupled to an additional 30,000+ detectors. The large aperture telescope receiver (LATR) is coupled to a six-meter crossed Dragone telescope and will be 2.4m in diameter, weigh over 3 tons, and have five cryogenic stages (80 K, 40 K, 4 K, 1 K and 100 mK). The LATR is coupled to the telescope via 13 independent optics tubes containing cryogenic optical elements and detectors. The cryostat will be cooled by by two Cryomech PT90 (80 K) and three Cryomech PT420…
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