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We have used a thick-walled aluminum enclosure to provide low-frequency shielding for biomagnetic studies with SQUID magnetic gradiometers. The shield provides an attenuation proportional to frequency above 1/3 Hz. A 24-hole fractional-turn SQUID gradiometer has been used in the enclosure to carry out studies of magnetoencephalography on humans. An ’’asymmetric’’ configuration for a second-derivative gradiometer has been developed which provides a significant increase in sensitivity and resolution over more conventional symmetric arrays.
J. E. Zimmerman (Tue,) studied this question.