HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class
Science
DAILY REPORT #4812
PERIOD COVERED: 5am March 16 - 5am March 17, 2009 (DOY
075/0900z-076/0900z)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED
WFPC2 11302
WFPC2 CYCLE 16 Standard Darks - Part III
This dark calibration program obtains dark frames every
week in order to
provide data for the ongoing calibration of the CCD dark
current rate,
and to monitor and characterize the evolution of hot pixels.
Over an
extended period these data will also provide a monitor of
radiation
damage to the CCDs.
WFPC2 11793
WFPC2 Cycle 16 Internal Monitor
This calibration proposal is the Cycle 15 routine internal
monitor for
WFPC2, to be run weekly to monitor the health of the
cameras. A variety
of internal exposures are obtained in order to provide a
monitor of the
integrity of the CCD camera electronics in both bays (both
gain 7 and
gain 15 -- to test stability of gains and bias levels), a
test for
quantum efficiency in the CCDs, and a monitor for possible
buildup of
contaminants on the CCD windows. These also provide raw
data for
generating annual super-bias reference files for the
calibration
pipeline.
WFPC2 11975
UV Light from Old Stellar Populations: a Census of UV
Sources in
Galactic Globular Clusters
In spite of the fact that HST has been the only operative
high-resolution eye in the UV-window over the last 18
years, no
homogeneous UV survey of Galactic globular clusters (GGCs)
has been
performed to date. In order to fill this gap in the
stellar population
studies, we propose a program that exploits the unique
capability of the
WFPC2 and the SBC in the far-/mid- UV for securing deep UV
imaging of 46
GGCs. The proposed observations will allow to study with
unprecedented
accuracy the hottest GGC stars, comprising the extreme
horizontal branch
(HB) stars and their progeny (the so-called AGB-manque',
and Post-early
AGB stars), and "exotic stellar populations"
like the blue straggler
stars and the interacting binaries. The targets have been
selected to
properly sample the GGC metallicity/structural parameter
space, thus to
unveil any possible correlation between the properties of
the hot
stellar populations and the cluster characteristics. In addition,
most
of the targets have extended HB "blue tails",
that can be properly
studied only by means of deep UV observations, especially in the far-UV
filters like the F160BW, that is not foreseen on the WFC3.
This data
base is complemented with GALEX observations in the
cluster outermost
regions, thus allowing to investigate any possible trend
of the
UV-bright stellar types over the entire radial extension
of the
clusters. Although the hottest GGC stars are just a small
class of
"special" objects, their study has a broad
relevance in the context of
structure formation and chemical evolution in the early
Universe,
bringing precious information on the basic star formation
processes and
the origin of blue light from galaxies. Indeed, the
proposed
observations will provide the community with an
unprecedented data set
suitable for addressing a number of still open
astrophysical questions,
ranging from the main drivers of the HB morphology and the
mass loss
processes, to the origin of the UV upturn in elliptical galaxies,
the
dating of distant systems from integrated light, and the
complex
interplay between stellar evolution and dynamics in dense
stellar
aggregates. In the spirit of constructing a community
resource, we
entirely waive the proprietary period for these
observations.
WFPC2 11983
An Imaging Survey of Protoplanetary Disks and Brown Dwarfs
in the
Chamaeleon I Region
We propose to carry out a HST/WFPC2 survey of young brown
dwarfs, Class
I and Class II sources in the Chamaelon I region, one of
the
best-studied star-forming regions, in order to investigate
the link
between disk evolution and the formation of
substellar-mass objects. We
will use deep broad-band imaging in the I and z-equivalent
HST bands to
unveil the unknown population of substellar binary
companions, down to a
few Jupiter masses for separations of a few tens of AU. We
will also
perform narrow-band imaging to directly detect accreting
circumstellar
disks and jets around brown dwarfs, Class-I and class-II
objects.
Chamaelon I is nearly coeaval of Orion (~1-2Myr) but at
~1/3 its
distance, allowing 3x higher resolution and 10x more flux
for comparable
objects. Unlike Orion, low-mass objects and protoplanetary
disks in
Chamaeleon I have been extensively studied with Spitzer,
but not yet
with the HST. The Chamaeleon I region is an ideal HST
target, as it lies
in the CVZ of the HST and therefore it is easily
accessible any time of
the year with long orbits.
WFPC2 11986
Completing HST's Local Volume Legacy
Nearby galaxies offer one of the few laboratories within
which stellar
populations can be tied to multi-wavelength observations.
They are thus
essential for calibrating and interpreting key
astrophysical
observables, such as broad-band luminosities, durations
and energy input
from starbursts, and timescales of UV, H-alpha, and FIR
emission. The
study of stellar populations in nearby galaxies requires
high-resolution
observations with HST, but HST's legacy for this limited
set of galaxies
remains incomplete.
As a first attempt to establish this legacy, The ACS
Nearby Galaxy
Survey Treasury (ANGST) began observations in late 2006.
ANGST was
designed to carry out a uniform multi-color survey of a
volume-limited
sample of ~70 nearby galaxies that could be used for
systematic studies
of resolved stellar populations. The resulting data
provide nuanced
constraints on the processes which govern star formation
and galaxy
evolution, for a well-defined population of galaxies. All
photometry for
the survey has been publicly released.
However, the failure of ACS 4.5 months after ANGST began
taking data led
to a drastic reduction in the planned survey. The loss is
two-fold.
First, the goals of completeness and uniformity were
greatly
compromised, impacting global comparison studies. Second,
the variety of
observed star formation histories was reduced. Given that
we have never
found two galaxies with identical star formation
histories, and fully
sampling the population allows us to catch those few
systems whose star
formation rates and metallicities place the strongest
constraints on key
astrophysical processes.
Here we propose WFPC2 observations of all remaining
galaxies within the
Local Volume (D<3.5Mpc) for which current HST
observations are
insufficient for meaningful stellar population studies. We
will use
these observations for research on the star formation
histories of
individual galaxies and the Local Volume, detailed
calibrations of star
formation rate indicators, and the durations of
starbursts. We will also
make them publicly available through the ANGST archive to
support future
research. The proposed observations will finally complete
a lasting
legacy of HST
WFPC2 11988
Searching for Intermediate Mass Black Holes in Globular
Clusters via
Proper Motions
The unambiguous detection of an intermediate mas black
hole (IMBH) in a
globular star cluster would be a major achievement for the
Hubble Space
Telescope. It is critical to know whether or not IMBHs
exist in the
centers of clusters in order to understand the dynamical
evolution of
dense stellar systems. Also, n IMBH detection would prove
the existence
of BHs in an entirely new mass range. Observationally, the
search has
been hampered by the low number of stars with known
velocities in the
central few arcseconds. This limits measurements of the
stellar velocity
dispersion in the region where the gravitational influence
of any IMBH
would be felt. Existing IMBH claims in the literature have
all been
called into question, and have all been based on line-of-sight
velocities from spectroscopy. In cycle 13, we obtained
ACS/HRC
observations for 5 nearby Galactic globular clusters for a
new proper
motion study. Here, we request WFPC2/PC observations of
these clusters,
all of which are observable in Feb-May 2009. This 4 year
baseline will
allow us to measure the proper motions of stars into the
very center of
each cluster, and either detect or place firm constraints
on the
presence of an IMBH. In addition, we will determine
whether or not the
clusters rotate or show any anisotropy in their motions.
Our small (<75
orbit) program meets the criteria of addressing high impact
science
(IMBH detection) using innovative methods (proper
motions).
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are
preliminary reports
of potential non-nominal performance that will be
investigated.)
HSTARS:
11727 - GSAcq(2,1,1) scheduled at 075/19:36:54 - 19:44:18
and REAcq(2,1,1)
scheduled at 075/22:50:40 both resulted in Fine Lock Back-up.
075/21:11z REAcq was successful.
Observations possibly affected: WFPC 46 – 47 and 50, Proposal ID# 11986.
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
SCHEDULED
SUCCESSFUL
FGS GSAcq
05
05
FGS
REAcq
09
09
OBAD with Maneuver
28
28
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)