HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT # 4203
PERIOD COVERED: UT September 20, 2006 (DOY 263)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED ACS/HRC 10556
Neutral Gas at Redshift z=0 5
Damped Lyman-alpha systems {DLAs} are used to track the bulk of the neutral hydrogen gas in the Universe Prior to HST UV spectroscopy, they could only be studied from the ground at redshifts z>1 65 However, HST has now permitted us to discover 41 DLAs at z<1 65 in our previous surveys Followup studies of these systems are providing a wealth of information about the evolution of the neutral gas phase component of the Universe But one problem is that these 41 low-redshift systems are spread over a wide range of redshifts spanning nearly 70% of the age of the Universe Consequently, past surveys for low-redshift DLAs have not been able to offer very good precision in any small redshift regime Here we propose an ACS-HRC- PR200L spectroscopic survey in the redshift interval z=[0 37, 0 7] which we estimate will permit us to discover another 41 DLAs This will not only allow us to double the number of low-redshift DLAs, but it will also provide a relatively high-precision regime in the low-redshift Universe that can be used to anchor evolutionary studies Fortunately DLAs have high absorption equivalent width, so ACS-HRC-PR200L has high-enough resoultion to perform this proposed MgII-selected DLA survey
ACS/HRC 10833
Host Galaxies of Reverberation Mapped AGNs
We propose to obtain unsaturated high-resolution images of 17 reverberation-mapped active galactic nuclei in order to remove the point-like nuclear light from each image, thus yielding a "nucleus-free" image of the host galaxy This will allow investigation of host galaxy properties: our particular interest is determination of the host-galaxy starlight contribution to the reverberation-mapping observations This is necessary {1} for accurate determination of the relationship between the AGN nuclear continuum flux and the size of the broad Balmer-line emitting regions of AGNs, which is important in estimating black hole masses for large samples of QSOs, and {2} for accurate determination of the bolometric luminosity of the AGN proper Through observations in Cycles 12 and 14, we have obtained or will obtain images of 18 of the 35 objects in the reverberation-mapping compilation of Peterson et al {2004} These observations revealed that the host-galaxy contribution, even in the higher-luminosity AGNs, is higher than expected and that all of the reverberation-mapped AGNs will have to be observed, not just the lower-luminosity sources; each source is different, and each source is important Therefore we request time to observe the 17 remaining reverberation-mapped AGNs
ACS/HRC 10878
An ACS Prism Snapshot Survey for z~2 Lyman Limit Systems
We propose to conduct a spectroscopic survey of Lyman limit absorbers at
redshifts 1
7 < z < 2
2, using ACS/HRC and the PR200L prism
We have
selected 100 quasars at 2
3 < z < 2
6 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Spectroscopic Quasar sample, for which no BAL signature is found at the
QSO redshift and no strong metal absorption lines are present at z > 2
3
along the lines of sight
The survey has three main observational goals
First, we will determine the redshift frequency dN/dz of the LLS over
the column density range 16
3 ACS/HRC/WFC 10758 ACS CCDs daily monitor This program consists of a set of basic tests to monitor, the read
noise, the development of hot pixels and test for any source of noise in
ACS CCD detectors
The files, biases and dark will be used to create
reference files for science calibration
This programme will be for the
entire lifetime of ACS
Changes from cycle 13:- The default gain for WFC
is 2 e-/DN
As before bias frames will be collected for both gain 1 and
gain 2
Dark frames are acquired using the default gain {2}
This
program cover the period May, 31 2006- Oct, 1-2006
The first half of
the program has a different proposal number: 10729
ACS/SBC 10872 Lyman Continuum Emission in Galaxies at z=1
2 Lyman continuum photons produced in massive starbursts may have played a
dominant role in the reionization of the Universe
Starbursts are
important contributors to the ionizing metagalactic background at lower
redshifts as well
However, their contribution to the background depends
upon the fraction of ionizing radiation that escapes from the intrinsic
opacity of galaxies below the Lyman limit
Current surveys suggest
escape fractions of a few percent, up to 10%, with very few detections
{as opposed to upper limits} having been reported
No detections have
been reported in the epochs between z=0
1 and z=2
We propose to measure
the fraction of escaping Lyman continuum radiation from 15 luminous
z~1
2 galaxies in the GOODS fields
Using the tremendous sensitivity of
the ACS Solar-blind Channel, we will reach AB=30 mag
, allowing us to
detect an escape fraction of 1%
We will correlate the amount of
escaping radiation with the photometric and morphological properties of
the galaxies
A non-detection in all sources would imply that QSOs
provide the overwhelming majority of ionizing radiation at z=1
3, and it
would strongly indicate that the properties of galaxies at higher
redshift have to be significantly different for galaxies to dominate
reionization
The deep FUV images will also be useful for extending the
FUV study of other galaxies in the GOODS fields
ACS/WFC 10793 A Survey for Supernovae in Massive High-Redshift Clusters We propose to continue our ongoing program designed to measure, to an
unprecedented 30% accuracy, the SN-Ia rate in a sample of massive
z=0
5-0
9 galaxy clusters
The SN-Ia rate is a poorly known observable,
especially at high z, and in cluster environments
The SN rate and its
redshift dependence can serve as powerful discrimiminants for a number
of key issues in astrophysics and cosmology
Our observations will: 1
Put clear constraints on the characteristic SN-Ia "delay time," the
typical time between the formation of a stellar population and the
explosion of some of its members as SNe-Ia
Such constraints can exclude
entire categories of SN-Ia progenitor models, since different models
predict different delays
2
Help resolve the question of the dominant
source of the high metallicity in the intracluster medium {ICM} -
SNe-Ia, or core-collapse SNe from an early stellar population with a
top-heavy IMF, perhaps those population III stars responsible for the
early re-ionization of the Universe
Since clusters are excellent
laboratories for studying enrichment {they generally have a simple
star-formation history, and matter cannot leave their deep potentials},
the results will be relevant for understanding metal enrichment in
general, and the possible role of first generation stars in early
Universal enrichment
Observations obtained so far during cycle 14 yield
many SNe in our cluster fields, but our follow-up campaign reveals most
are not in cluster galaxies
Our interim results indicate a cluster SN
rate at the very low end of the range considered, and its accuracy is
limited by the small number of cluster SNe
We request additional visits
to increase the number of cluster SNe and achieve a measurement that is
not limited by Poisson errors
A detailed progress report is included
ACS/WFC/NIC2 10496 Decelerating and Dustfree: Efficient Dark Energy Studies with Supernovae
and Clusters We propose a novel HST approach to obtain a dramatically more useful
"dust free" Type Ia supernovae {SNe Ia} dataset than available with the
previous GOODS searches
Moreover, this approach provides a strikingly
more efficient search-and-follow-up that is primarily pre- scheduled
The resulting dark energy measurements do not share the major systematic
uncertainty at these redshifts, that of the extinction correction with a
prior
By targeting massive galaxy clusters at z > 1 we obtain a
five-times higher efficiency in detection of Type Ia supernovae in
ellipticals, providing a well-understood host galaxy environment
These
same deep cluster images then also yield fundamental calibrations
required for future weak lensing and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich measurements of
dark energy, as well as an entire program of cluster studies
The data
will make possible a factor of two improvement on supernova constraints
on dark energy time variation, and much larger improvement in systematic
uncertainty
They will provide both a cluster dataset and a SN Ia
dataset that will be a longstanding scientific resource
WFPC2 10915 ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Existing HST observations of nearby galaxies comprise a sparse and
highly non-uniform archive, making comprehensive comparative studies
among galaxies essentially impossible
We propose to secure HST's
lasting impact on the study of nearby galaxies by undertaking a
systematic, complete, and carefully crafted imaging survey of ALL
galaxies in the Local Universe outside the Local Group
The resulting
images will allow unprecedented measurements of: {1} the star formation
history {SFH} of a >100 Mpc^3 volume of the Universe with a time
resolution of Delta[log{t}]=0
25; {2} correlations between spatially
resolved SFHs and environment; {3} the structure and properties of thick
disks and stellar halos; and {4} the color distributions, sizes, and
specific frequencies of globular and disk clusters as a function of
galaxy mass and environment
To reach these goals, we will use a
combination of wide-field tiling and pointed deep imaging to obtain
uniform data on all 72 galaxies within a volume-limited sample extending
to ~3
5 Mpc, with an extension to the M81 group
For each galaxy, the
wide-field imaging will cover out to ~1
5 times the optical radius and
will reach photometric depths of at least 2 magnitudes below the tip of
the red giant branch throughout the limits of the survey volume
One
additional deep pointing per galaxy will reach SNR~10 for red clump
stars, sufficient to recover the ancient SFH from the color-magnitude
diagram
This proposal will produce photometric information for ~100
million stars {comparable to the number in the SDSS survey} and uniform
multi-color images of half a square degree of sky
The resulting archive
will establish the fundamental optical database for nearby galaxies, in
preparation for the shift of high-resolution imaging to the
near-infrared
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports
of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated
) HSTARS: (None) COMPLETED OPS REQUEST:
17920-0 - FSW 3
0B RAM Installation
17930-0 - Backout FSW 3
0B Telemetry Format Changes COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None) FGS GSacq 08 08
FGS REacq 07 07
OBAD with Maneuver 30 30 SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: Flash Report - The DOY 265 Solar Eclipse Event
Management and State of Charge (SOC) Ops Briefing was conducted on
September 20, 2006
The first of three solar eclipse events, with a
maximum darkness of ~ 88 percent will occur on 265/10:02- 10:33
(9/22/06)
The eclipse recovery will include an update to the FSW SOC
benchmark, SOC safing thresholds, and the pressure test limits to
reflect the updated system capacity as a result of the measurements from
the latest battery capacity tests
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