HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT # 4215
PERIOD COVERED: UT October 06,07,08,09, 2006 (DOY 279,280,281,282)
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
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 }
WFPC2 11029
WFPC2 CYCLE 15 Intflat Linearity Check and Filter Rotation Anomaly Monitor
Intflat observations will be taken to provide a linearity check: the linearity test consists of a series of intflats in F555W, in each gain and each shutter A combination of intflats, visflats, and earthflats will be used to check the repeatability of filter wheel motions {Intflat sequences tied to decons, visits 1-18 in prop 10363, have been moved to the cycle 15 decon proposal xxxx for easier scheduling } Note: long-exposure WFPC2 intflats must be scheduled during ACS anneals to prevent stray light from the WFPC2 lamps from contaminating long ACS external exposures
WFPC2 11027
Visible Earth Flats
This proposal monitors flatfield stability This proposal obtains sequences of Earth streak flats to construct high quality flat fields for the WFPC2 filter set These flat fields will allow mapping of the OTA illumination pattern and will be used in conjuction with previous internal and external flats to generate new pipeline superflats These Earth flats will complement the Earth flat data obtained during cycles 4-14
ACS/WFC/HRC 10920
High-Resolution Imaging of Nearby Lyman Break Galaxy Analogs in the GALEX All-Sky Survey
We have used the ultraviolet all-sky imaging survey currently being conducted by the Galaxy Evolution Explorer {GALEX} to identify for the first time a rare population of low-redshift starbursts with properties remarkably similar to high-redshift Lyman Break Galaxies These compact UV luminous galaxies {UVLGs} resemble Lyman Break Galaxies in terms of size, UV luminosity, star-formation rate, surface brightness, mass, metallicity, kinematics, dust content, and color They have characteristic ``ages'' {stellar mass/SFR} of only a few hundred Myr This population of galaxies is thus worthy of study in its own right and as a sample of local analogs of Lyman Break Galaxies We propose to image a sample of the 9 nearest and brightest compact UVLGs in the near-ultraviolet, near-infrared, and H-alpha using ACS With these images we will 1} characterize their structure and morphology, 2} look for signs of interactions and mergers, 3} investigate the distribution and propogation of star formation over varying time scales, and 4} quantify the stellar populations and star formation history, in order to determine whether a previous generation of stars formed long before the current burst These data will perfectly complement our existing Spitzer, GALEX, and SDSS data, and will provide important information on star-formation in the present-day universe as well as shed light on the earliest major episodes of star formation in high-redshift galaxies
NIC2 10906
The Fundamental Plane of Massive Gas-Rich Mergers: II The QUEST QSOs
We propose deep NICMOS H-band imaging of a carefully selected sample of 23 local QSOs This program is the last critical element of a comprehensive investigation of the most luminous mergers in the nearby universe, the ultraluminous infrared galaxies {ULIRGs} and the quasars This effort is called QUEST: Quasar / ULIRG Evolutionary STudy The high-resolution HST images of the QUEST QSOs will complement an identical set of images on the ULIRG sample obtained during Cycle 12, an extensive set of ground-based data that include long-slit NIR spectra from a Large VLT Program, and a large set of mid-infrared spectra from a Cycle 1 medium-size program with Spitzer This unique dataset will allow us to derive with unprecedented precision structual, kinematic, and activity parameters for a large unbiased sample of objects spanning the entire ULIRG/QSO luminosity function These data will refine the fundamental plane of massive gas-rich mergers and enable us to answer the following quesitons: {1} Do ultraluminous mergers form elliptical galaxies, and in particular, giant ellipticals? {2} Do ULIRGs evolve into optical bright QSOs? The results from this detailed study of massive mergers in the local universe will be relevant to understanding the basic physical processes involved in creating massive early-type host on the one hand, and growing/feeding embedded massive black holes on the other, in major galaxy mergers This is an important question since 50% of cosmic star formation at high-z and most of the big BHs appear to be formed in this process
ACS/WFC 10905
The Dynamic State of the Dwarf Galaxy Rich Canes Venatici I Region
With accurate distances, the nearest groups of galaxies can be resolved in 3 dimensions and the radial component of the motions of galaxies due to local density perturbations can be distinquished from cosmological expansion components Currently, with the ACS, galaxy distances within 8 Mpc can be measured effectively and efficiently by detecting the tip of the red giant branch {TRGB} Of four principal groups at high galactic latitude in this domain, the Canes Venatici I Group {a} is the least studied, {b} is the most populated, though overwhelmingly by dwarf galaxies, and {c} is likely the least dynamically evolved It is speculated that galaxies in low mass groups may fail to retain baryons as effectively as those in high mass groups, resulting in significantly higher mass-to-light ratios The CVn I Group is suspected to lie in the mass regime where the speculated astrophysical processes that affect baryon retention are becoming important
NIC2 10893
Sweeping Away the Dust: Reliable Dark Energy with an Infrared Hubble Diagram
We propose building a high-z Hubble Diagram using type Ia supernovae observed in the infrared rest-frame J-band The infrared has a number of exceptional properties The effect of dust extinction is minimal, reducing a major systematic tha may be biasing dark energy measurements Also, recent work indicates that type Ia supernovae are true standard candles in the infrared meaning that our Hubble diagram will be resistant to possible evolution in the Phillips relation over cosmic time High signal-to-noise measurements of 9 type Ia events at z~0 4 will be compared with an independent optical Hubble diagram from the ESSENCE project to test for a shift in the derived dark energy equation of state due to a systematic bias Because of the bright sky background, H-band photometry of z~0 4 supernovae is not feasible from the ground Only the superb image quality and dark infrared sky seen by HST makes this test possible This experiment may also lead to a better, more reliable way of mapping the expansion history of the universe with the Joint Dark Energy Mission
ACS/WFC 10886
The Sloan Lens ACS Survey: Towards 100 New Strong Lenses
As a continuation of the highly successful Sloan Lens ACS {SLACS} Survey for new strong gravitational lenses, we propose one orbit of ACS-WFC F814W imaging for each of 50 high- probability strong galaxy-galaxy lens candidates These observations will confirm new lens systems and permit immediate and accurate photometry, shape measurement, and mass modeling of the lens galaxies The lenses delivered by the SLACS Survey all show extended source structure, furnishing more constraints on the projected lens potential than lensed-quasar image positions In addition, SLACS lenses have lens galaxies that are much brighter than their lensed sources, facilitating detailed photometric and dynamical observation of the former When confirmed lenses from this proposal are combined with lenses discovered by SLACS in Cycles 13 and 14, we expect the final SLACS lens sample to number 80--100: an approximate doubling of the number of known galaxy-scale strong gravitational lenses and an order-of-magnitude increase in the number of optical Einstein rings By virtue of its homogeneous selection and sheer size, the SLACS sample will allow an unprecedented exploration of the mass structure of the early-type galaxy population as a function of all other observable quantities This new sample will be a valuable resource to the astronomical community by enabling qualitatively new strong lensing science, and as such we will waive all but a short {3-month} proprietary period on the observations
ACS/WFC 10880
The host galaxies of QSO2s: AGN feeding and evolution at high luminosities
Now that the presence of supermassive black holes in the nuclei of
galaxies is a well established fact, other questions related to the AGN
phenomena still have to be answered
Problems of particular interest are
how the AGN gets fed, how the black hole evolves and how the evolution
of the black hole is related to the evolution of the galaxy bulge
Here
we propose to address some of these issues using ACS/WFC + F775W
snapshot images of 73 QSO2s with redshifts in the range 0
3 ACS/WFC 10848 Relating the host galaxies of type-2 quasars to their infrared
properties The obscured quasar population has been found to consist of a wide
variety of objects
In this proposal, we wish to study the host galaxies
of six z~0
6 type-2 quasars selected via their mid- infrared emission
Infrared spectra and photometry of these objects show that they include
both actively star-forming and non-starforming galaxies, and have dust
columns to the AGN ranging from moderate to high
We will relate the
host galaxy properties to the infrared properties of these type-2
quasars, and to the host galaxies of type-1 quasars of similar redshift
and bolometric luminosity
These observations will thus help us to
understand how the different types of obscured quasars are related to
each other, and to the normal quasar population
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 10825 The Formation Epoch of Early-type Galaxies: Constraints from the
Fundamental Plane at z=1
3 Field and cluster surveys both show a ~50% decrease in the number of
early-type galaxies at redshifts near 1
Galaxies that have either
recently transformed into early-types or undergone star formation should
have younger appearing stellar populations
The resulting change in the
mass-to-light ratio can be detected by the offset in the fundamental
plane with redshift
We will use the fundamental plane to test whether a
significant fraction of early-type galaxies have evidence of recent star
formation, using a sample of ~20 z=1
3 cluster and field early-type
galaxies
This is 7 times larger than the sample previously used at this
redshift
We already have the high signal-to-noise 12-20 hour long Keck
spectra for these galaxies we need for velocity dispersions
To use the
fundamental plane, we require sizes and surface brightnesses
We propose
12 orbits of NICMOS Camera 2 imaging to measure the sizes and surface
brightness distributions of these objects in a rest-frame optical
passband
These data will provide high quality surface brightness
profiles out two ~2 half-light radii, at wavelengths comparable to
previous fundamental plane studies
When combined with our spectra, the
HST data will establish the mass-to-light ratio evolution for massive
early-type galaxies from the fundamental plane
We will define the epoch
of last star formation for these z=1
3 galaxies, directly testing the
claims of strong evolution at z=1
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/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
WFPC2 10748 WFPC2 CYCLE 14 Standard Darks 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
ACS/HRC/WFC 10733 CCD Hot Pixel Annealing Hot pixel annealing will continue to be performed once every 4 weeks
The CCD TECs will be turned off and heaters will be activated to bring
the detector temperatures to about +20C
This state will be held for
approximately 6 hours, after which the heaters are turned off, the TECs
turned on, and the CCDs returned to normal operating condition
To
assess the effectiveness of the annealing, a bias and four dark images
will be taken before and after the annealing procedure for both WFC and
HRC
The HRC darks are taken in parallel with the WFC darks
The charge
transfer efficiency {CTE} of the ACS CCD detectors declines as damage
due to on-orbit radiation exposure accumulates
This degradation has
been closely monitored at regular intervals, because it is likely to
determine the useful lifetime of the CCDs
We combine the annealling
activity with the charge transfer efficiency monitoring and also merge
into the routine dark image collection
To this end, the CTE monitoring
exposures have been moved into this proposal
All the data for this
program is acquired using internal targets {lamps} only, so all of the
exposures should be taken during Earth occultation time {but not during
SAA passages}
This program emulates the ACS pre-flight ground
calibration and post-launch SMOV testing {program 8948}, so that results
from each epoch can be directly compared
Extended Pixel Edge Response
{EPER} and First Pixel Response {FPR} data will be obtained over a range
of signal levels for both the Wide Field Channel {WFC}, and the High
Resolution Channel {HRC}
ACS/WFC/NIC3 10632 Searching for galaxies at z>6
5 in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field We propose to obtain deep ACS {F606W, F775W, F850LP} imaging in the area
of the original Hubble Ultra Deep Field NICMOS parallel fields and -
through simultaneous parallel observations - deep NICMOS {F110W, F160W}
imaging of the ACS UDF area
Matching the extreme imaging depth in the
optical and near-IR bands will result in seven fields with sufficiently
sensitive multiband data to detect the expected typical galaxies at z=7
and 8
Presently no such a field exist
Our combined optical and near-IR
ultradeep fields will be in three areas separated by about 20 comoving
Mpc at z=7
This will allow us to give a first assessment of the degree
of cosmic variance
If reionization is a process extending over a large
redshift interval and the luminosity function doesn't evolve strongly
beyond z=6, these data will allow us to identify of the order of a dozen
galaxies at 6
5 NIC2 10519 Testing the Stellar Coalescence and Accretion Disk Theories of Massive
Star Formation with NICMOS The importance of massive stars cannot be underestimated - they produce
most of the heavy elements in the universe and dominate the evolution of
the interstellar medium in their vicinity
In spite of their
significance, our understanding of their formation is meager
Both
accretion through disks, analogous to the process of low-mass star
formation, and coalescence of low-mass stars through collisions in the
dense cores of stellar clusters have been suggested
Possibly both
mechanisms occur
High spatial resolution polarization measurements of
the closest massive young stellar objects {YSOs} will enable us to
search for evidence of disk accretion or coalescence in the form of
patterns indicative of light scattered off a coherent disk or off a disk
disrupted by an infalling star, respectively
Here we propose to use 2
micron polarimetry with NICMOS to identify the presence of accretion
disks around massive YSOs or to characterize their environments as
possibly disrupted from a close stellar encounter
There are only a few
sources that meet the stringent selection criteria for this
investigation {even with HST}, which we will examine here
High spatial
resolution is required, but even more important, the point spread
function {PSF} must be stable with time
Furthermore, the PSF must put
minimal flux into large spatial scales, something that cannot be
achieved with adaptive optics
This combination of high Strehl ratio and
stable PSF can only be achieved from space
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
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports
of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated
) HSTARS: 10461 - GSacq(2,1,1) failed due to search radius limit exceeded
GSacq(2,1,1)scheduled at 281/22:23:27 failed at 22:27:22 due to search
radius limit exceeded on FGS 1
ESB a07(C Timeout-DV) was received
OBAD1 showed errors of V1=-910
88, V2=3063
39, V3=219
29, RSS=3203
46
OBAD2 showed errors of V1=-8
47, V2=-1
22, V3=-8
46, RSS=12
04
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST:
983-2 - Documentation of Modification to 8051 RAM COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None) FGS GSacq 33 32
FGS REacq 25 25
OBAD with Maneuver 116 116 SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: Flash Report for ACS HRC and CEB Single Toggle test At 282/21:55 the ACS HRC CEB internal ASPC2 relay was successfully
cycled from side 2 to side 1 and then back via real-time command (OPS
Request #17938)
All other HRC CEB internal relays were also
successfully cycled
ACS will start its transition from it monthly anneal cycle to WFHROper
at 283/09:01
LVPS CEB power will be applied to both the HRC and WFC CEB
at 283/09:40:33
At this time, the results of the single toggle will be
seen in the telemetry down link and another flash report will be sent
out indicating Joy/NoJoy
Single Toggle test Flash Report #2 The ACS HRC CEB ASPC2 +35 voltage has been restored as a result of the
single toggle
All other voltages and temperatures are within their
normal ranges
The SISE will continue to monitor the input voltage over
the next few days
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