HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT # 4282
PERIOD COVERED: UT January 19,20,21, 2007 (DOY 019,020,021)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED
NIC1/NIC2/NIC3 8794
NICMOS Post-SAA calibration - CR Persistence Part 5
A new procedure proposed to alleviate the CR-persistence problem of NICMOS Dark frames will be obtained immediately upon exiting the SAA contour 23, and every time a NICMOS exposure is scheduled within 50 minutes of coming out of the SAA The darks will be obtained in parallel in all three NICMOS Cameras The POST-SAA darks will be non-standard reference files available to users with a USEAFTER date/time mark The keyword 'USEAFTER=date/time' will also be added to the header of each POST-SAA DARK frame The keyword must be populated with the time, in addition to the date, because HST crosses the SAA ~8 times per day so each POST-SAA DARK will need to have the appropriate time specified, for users to identify the ones they need Both the raw and processed images will be archived as POST-SAA DARKSs Generally we expect that all NICMOS science/calibration observations started within 50 minutes of leaving an SAA will need such maps to remove the CR persistence from the science images Each observation will need its own CRMAP, as different SAA passages leave different imprints on the NICMOS detectors
ACS/SBC 11074
ACS/SBC Darks in Support of Specific SBC Science Observations
This program provides SBC DARK visits to be scheduled in conjuction with certain specific science observations which require the SBC to be turned on in the orbit preceeding the science observation
NIC3 11064
CYCLE 15 NICMOS SPECTROPHOTOMETRY CALIBRATION PROGRAM
Now that the spectrophotometric capabilities of the NICMOS grism have been established, cycle 15 observations are needed to refine the sensitivity estimates, to check for sensitivity loss with time, to improve the accuracy of the linearity correction, to improve the secondary flux standards by re-observation, and to expand the G206 data set now that the sky subtraction technique has been shown to produce useful fluxes for some of the fainter secondary standards These faint secondary IR standards will be a significant step towards establishing flux standards for JWST, as well as for SNAP, Spitzer, and SOFIA 1 Re-observe the 3 primary WDs GD71, G191B2b, & GD153 twice each, once at the beginning and once near the end of the 18 month cycle To date, we have only 2 observation of each star, while the corresponding STIS data set for these primary standards ranges from 6 to 23 obs No observations exist for GD71 or GD153 with G206, so that the current G206 sensitivity is defined solely by G191B2B Purposes: Refine sensitivities, measure sens losses Orbits: 2 for each of 6 visits = 12 2 Re-observe WD1057 & WD1657 plus another P041C lamp-on visit to improve the scatter in the non-lin measurements per Fig 8 of NIC ISR 2006-02 The WD stars require 2 orbits each, while the lamp-on test is done in one The very faintest and most crucial standard WD1657 has 2 good visits already, so to substantially improve the S/N, two visits of two orbits are needed Include G206 for P041C in the lamp-off baseline part of that orbit Orbits: WD1057-2, WD1657-4, P041C-1 --> 7 3 Re-observe 9 secondary standards to improve S/N of the faint ones and to include G206 for all 9 BD+17 {3 obs} is not repeated in this cycle Four are bright enough to do in one orbit: VB8, 2M0036+18, P330E, and P177D Orbits:2*5+4=14 Grand Total orbits over 18 month cycle 15 is 12+6+14=32 {Roelof will submit the P041C lamp-on visit in a separate program }
NIC3 11062
NICMOS non-linearity tests
This program incorporates a number of tests to analyse the count rate dependent non-linearity seen in NICMOS spectro-photometric observations We will observe a field with stars of a range in luminosity in NGC3603 with NICMOS in NIC1: F090M, F110W, F140W, F160W NIC2: F110W, F160W, F187W, F205W, and F222M NIC3: F110W, F150W, F160W, F175W, and F222M We will repeat the observations with flatfield lamp on, creating artificially high count-rates, allowing tests of NICMOS linearity as function of count rate We first take exposures with the lamp off, then exposures with the lamp on, and repeat at the end with lamp off Finally, we continue with taking darks during occultation We will furthermore observe spectro-photometric standard P041C using the G096, G141, and G206 grisms in NIC3, and repeat the lamp off/on/off test to artificially create a high background
NIC3/NIC1/NIC2 11059
Flats Stability
This calibration proposal is the Cycle 15 NICMOS flat field monitor program A series of camera 1, 2, & 3 flat fields will be obtained to monitor the health of the cameras
ACS/HRC 11041
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 For cycle 15 the program will cover 18 months 12 1 06->05 31 08 and it has been divied into three different proposal each covering six months The three proposals are 11041-11042-11043
WFPC2/ACS/HRC/WFPC 11020
Cycle 15 Focus Monitor
The focus of HST is measured primarily with ACS/HRC over full CVZ orbits to obtain accurate mean focus values via a well sampled breathing curve Coma and astigmatism are also determined from the same data in order to further understand orbital effects on image quality and optical alignments To monitor the stability of ACS to WFPC2 relative focii, we've carried over from previous focus monitor programs parallel observations taken with the two cameras at suitable orientations of previously observed targets, and interspersed them with the HRC CVZ visits
FGS 10998
Exoplanet XO-1b: light curve and parallax
We propose to measure the radius of the recently-discovered transiting extrasolar planet XO-1b XO-1b's nominal radius is 1 30 times the radius of Jupiter, which is nearly as large as HD 209458b {1 32 R_J} We will use two independent methods to measure XO-1b's radius: 1} precision light curve analysis, and 2} measurement of its trigonometric parallax combined with its spectroscopically-determined effective temperature and its apparent magnitude
FGS 10931
Dynamical Masses and Radii of Four White Dwarf Stars
We will use FGS1R in its high angular resolution observing mode (TRANS) to resolve the white dwarf binary systems Each exposure will be comprised of about 20 scans The interferograms derived from each scan will be cross- correlated and co-added to yield a high SNR To further surpress the noise (these targets are near the FGS's faint limiting magnitude), the co-added inteferograms will be carefully smoothed by being represented as a piece-wise smooth segmanted polynomial These observations will yield the separation and position angle of the binary components, as well as the brightness of each In addition, the binary and field stars simultaneously in the FGS FOV will be observed in POS mode to accurately determine the relative positions of the stars This will facilitate the construction of an inertial reference frame for the binary, thereby allowing the relative orbit that will be ultimately determined from the TRANS data to be converted into a physical orbit This will allow us to determine the relative mass of each white dwarf in the binarty system In addition, the POS mode data will give the proper motion and parallax of the binary, which will allow us to compute the mass and radius of each white dwarf
ACS/WFC 10918
Reducing Systematic Errors on the Hubble Constant: Metallicity Calibration of the Cepheid PL Relation
Reducing the systematic errors on the Hubble constant is still of significance and of immediate importance to modern cosmology One of the largest remaining uncertainties in the Cepheid- based distance scale {which itself is at the foundation of the HST Key Project determination of H_o} which can now be addressed directly by HST, is the effect of metallicity on the Cepheid Period-Luminosity relation Three chemically distinct regions in M101 will be used to directly measure and thereby calibrate the change in zero point of the Cepheid PL relation over a range of metallicities that run from SMC-like, through Solar, to metallicities as high as the most metal- enriched galaxies in the pure Hubble flow ACS for the first time offers the opportunity to make a precise calibration of this effect which currently accounts for at least a third of the total systematic uncertainty on Ho The calibration will be made in the V and I bandpasses so as to be immediately and directly applicable to the entire HST Cepheid-based distance scale sample, and most especially to the highest-metallicity galaxies that were hosts to the Type Ia supernovae, which were then used to extend the the distance scale calibration out to cosmologically significant distances
NIC1 10879
A search for planetary-mass companions to the nearest L dwarfs - completing the survey
We propose to extend the most sensitive survey yet undertaken for very low-mass companions to ultracool dwarfs We will use NICMOS to complete imaging of an all-sky sample of 87 L dwarfs in 80 systems within 20 parsecs of the Sun The combination of infrared imaging and proximity allows us to search for companions with mass ratios q>0 25 at separations exceeding ~3 AU, while probing companions with q>0 5 at ~1 5 AU separation This resolution is crucial, since no ultracool binaries are known in the field with separations exceeding 15 AU Fifty L dwarfs from the 20-parsec sample have high-resolution imaging, primarily through our Cycle 13 HST proposal which identified six new binaries, including an L/T system Here, we propose to target the remaining 30 dwarfs
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 10877 A Snapshot Survey of the Sites of Recent, Nearby Supernovae During the past few years, robotic {or nearly robotic} searches for
supernovae {SNe}, most notably our Lick Observatory Supernova Search
{LOSS}, have found hundreds of SNe, many of them in quite nearby
galaxies {cz < 4000 km/s}
Most of the objects were discovered before
maximum brightness, and have follow-up photometry and spectroscopy; they
include some of the best-studied SNe to date
We propose to conduct a
snapshot imaging survey of the sites of some of these nearby objects, to
obtain late-time photometry that {through the shape of the light and
color curves} will help reveal the origin of their lingering energy
The
images will also provide high-resolution information on the local
environments of SNe that are far superior to what we can procure from
the ground
For example, we will obtain color-color and color-magnitude
diagrams of stars in these SN sites, to determine the SN progenitor
masses and constraints on the reddening
Recovery of the SNe in the new
HST images will also allow us to actually pinpoint their progenitor
stars in cases where pre- explosion images exist in the HST archive
This proposal is an extension of our successful Cycle 13 snapshot survey
with ACS
It is complementary to our Cycle 15 archival proposal, which
is a continuation of our long-standing program to use existing HST
images to glean information about SN environments
ACS/SBC 10862 Comprehensive Auroral Imaging of Jupiter and Saturn during the
International Heliophysical Year A comprehensive set of observations of the auroral emissions from
Jupiter and Saturn is proposed for the International Heliophysical Year
in 2007, a unique period of especially concentrated measurements of
space physics phenomena throughout the solar system
We propose to
determine the physical relationship of the various auroral processes at
Jupiter and Saturn with conditions in the solar wind at each planet
This can be accomplished with campaigns of observations, with a sampling
interval not to exceed one day, covering at least one solar rotation
The solar wind plasma density approaching Jupiter will be measured by
the New Horizons spacecraft, and a separate campaign near opposition in
May 2007 will determine the effect of large-scale variations in the
interplanetary magnetic field {IMF} on the Jovian aurora by
extrapolation from near-Earth solar wind measurements
A similar Saturn
campaign near opposition in Jan
2007 will combine extrapolated solar
wind data with measurements from a wide range of locations within the
Saturn magnetosphere by Cassini
In the course of making these
observations, it will be possible to fully map the auroral footprints of
Io and the other satellites to determine both the local magnetic field
geometry and the controlling factors in the electromagnetic interaction
of each satellite with the corotating magnetic field and plasma density
Also in the course of making these observations, the auroral emission
properties will be compared with the properties of the near-IR
ionospheric emissions {from ground-based observations} and non thermal
radio emissions, from ground-based observations for Jupiter?s decametric
radiation and Cassini plasma wave measurements of the Saturn Kilometric
Radiation {SKR}
NIC3 10861 An ACS Treasury Survey of the Coma cluster of galaxies We propose to use the unique spatial resolution of HST and ACS to
construct a Treasury imaging survey of the core and infall region of the
richest local cluster, Coma
We will observe samples of thousands of
galaxies down to magnitude B=27
3 with the aim of studying in detail the
dwarf galaxy population which, according to hierarchical models of
galaxy formation, are the earliest galaxies to form in the universe
Our
initial scientific objectives are: 1} A study of the structure of the
dwarf galaxies, including scaling laws, nuclear structure and
morphology, to compare with hierarchical and evolutionary models of
their formation
2} A study of the stellar populations from colors and
color gradients, and how the internal chemical evolution of galaxies is
affected by interaction with the cluster gaseous and galaxy environment
3} To determine the effect of the cluster environment upon morphological
features, disks, bulges and bars, by comparing these structure in the
Coma sample with field galaxy samples
4} Identification of dwarf galaxy
samples for further study with the new generation of multi-object and
integral-field spectrographs on 8-10 metre class telescopes such as
Keck, Subaru, Gemini, and GTC
This is the first such survey of a nearby
rich cluster
It will provide a key database for studies of galaxy
formation and evolution, and a very needed reference for comparison with
similar galaxy surveys both in lower density environments in the nearby
universe, and in high density environments at high redshifts
ACS/HRC 10844 Following Eta Carinae's Change of State Eta Carinae is now known to be undergoing some unusually rapid changes
on a timescale of several years
They are probably essential for
modeling the star's long-term recovery from its Giant Eruption 160 years
ago -- the prototype "supernova impostor" event
Since high spatial
resolution is needed to isolate the central star, and the present state
will probably not recur in the future, it is important to obtain HST
data during the next two years
We propose a cost- effective set of ACS
observations with three goals: {1} to obtain a continuing record of the
star's rapid UV and visual brightening; {2} to lengthen the temporal
baseline of ACS images enough to settle an important question concerning
ejecta ages; and {3} to extend the record of morphological changes in
the inner ejecta past the midpoint of eta Car's 5
5-year cycle
ACS/WFC 10829 Secular Evolution at the End of the Hubble Sequence The bulgeless disk galaxies at the end of the Hubble Sequence evolve at
a glacial pace relative to their more violent, earlier-type cousins
The
causes of their internal, or secular evolution are important because
secular evolution represents the future fate of all galaxies in our
accelerating Universe and is a key ingredient to understanding galaxy
evolution in lower-density environments at present
The rate of secular
evolution is largely determined by the stability of the cold ISM against
collapse, star formation, and the buildup of a central bulge
Key
diagnostics of the ISM's stability are the presence of compact molecular
clouds and narrow dust lanes
Surprisingly, edge-on, pure disk galaxies
with circular velocities below 120 km/s do not appear to contain such
dust lanes
We propose to obtain ACS/WFC F606W images of a well-selected
sample of extremely late-type disk galaxies to measure the
characteristic scale size of the cold ISM and determine if they possess
the unstable, cold ISM necessary to drive secular evolution
Our sample
has been carefully constructed to include disk galaxies above and below
the critical circular velocity of 120 km/s where the dust properties of
edge-on disks change so remarkably
We will then use surface brightness
profiles to search for nuclear star clusters and pseudobulges, which are
early indicators that secular evolution is at work, as well as measure
the pitch angle of the dust lanes as a function of radius to estimate
the central mass concentrations
NIC2, ACS/WFC 10802 SHOES-Supernovae, HO, for the Equation of State of Dark energy The present uncertainty in the value of the Hubble constant {resulting
in an uncertainty in Omega_M} and the paucity of Type Ia supernovae at
redshifts exceeding 1 are now the leading obstacles to determining the
nature of dark energy
We propose a single, integrated set of
observations for Cycle 15 that will provide a 40% improvement in
constraints on dark energy
This program will observe known Cepheids in
six reliable hosts of Type Ia supernovae with NICMOS, reducing the
uncertainty in H_0 by a factor of two because of the smaller dispersion
along the instability strip, the diminished extinction, and the weaker
metallicity dependence in the infrared
In parallel with ACS, at the
same time the NICMOS observations are underway, we will discover and
follow a sample of Type Ia supernovae at z > 1
Together, these
measurements, along with prior constraints from WMAP, will provide a
great improvement in HST's ability to distinguish between a static,
cosmological constant and dynamical dark energy
The Hubble Space
Telescope is the only instrument in the world that can make these IR
measurements of Cepheids beyond the Local Group, and it is the only
telescope in the world that can be used to find and follow supernovae at
z > 1
Our program exploits both of these unique capabilities of HST to
learn more about one of the greatest mysteries in science
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
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports
of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated
) HSTARS:
10636 - GSAcq(2,1,1) failed to RGA Hold (Gyro Control)
Upon acquisition of signal at 019/20:59:51, the GSAcq(2,1,1) scheduled
at 019/20:42:58 - 20:51:03 was observed to have failed to RGA Hold due
to scan step limit exceeded on FGS 2
Pre-acquisition OBADs showed (RSS)
attitude correction values of 2176
64 and 8
64 arcseconds
Post-acquisition OBAD/MAP showed 3-axis (RSS) error value of 1
03
arcseconds
Subsequent REacq(2,1,1) scheduled at 019/22:16:53 was
successful
10637 - GSAcq(1,0,1) failed due to Scan step limit exceeded on FGS 1
GSAcq failed at 11:10:58
1st OBAD RSS 3708
38 as
2nd OBAD RSS 17
60 as REacq scheduled at 14:06:10 failed due to stop flag on FGS 1
1st OBAD RSS 62
00 as
2nd OBAD RSS 11
31 as REacq failed at 14:10:46 with QF1STOPF and QSTOP flags
MAP V1 1
69, V2 76
44, V3 -0
62, RSS 76
46 as 10638 - REAcq (1,3,1) Loss of Lock
Following successful REAcq (1,3,1) scheduled at 021/09:16:01, FGS-3, the
sub-dominate guider lost lock at 021/09:41:05
The mnemonic QDVFGSM0
(FGS Attitude Error Angle) broke limit at 021/09:41:10 with a Red High
value of 0
00179952 radians
the spacecraft entered M2G Mode at
021/09:48:08
The TERM EXP was not scheduled until 021/10:12:29
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None) COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None) FGS GSacq 27 25
FGS REacq 17 15
OBAD with Maneuver 88 88 SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None) The following information is a reminder of your current mailing
list subscription: You are subscribed to the following list:
[list_name] using the following email:
example@example.com You may automatically unsubscribe from this list at any time by
visiting the following URL: http://www
aus-city
com/cgi-bin/dada/mail
cgi/u/[list]/ If the above URL is inoperable, make sure that you have copied the
entire address
Some mail readers will wrap a long URL and thus break
this automatic unsubscribe mechanism
You may also change your subscription by visiting this list's main screen: http://www
aus-city
com/cgi-bin/dada/mail
cgi/list/[list] If you're still having trouble, please contact the list owner at: The following physical address is associated with this mailing list: http://www
aus-city
com SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL
<mailto:list
admin@aus-city
com>
This mailing list is announce-only.
HST Status Report list
Private list