HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT # 42743
PERIOD COVERED: UT January 05,06,07, 2007 (DOY 005,006,007)
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/HRC 11053
Earth Flats
Sky flats will be obtained by observing the bright Earth with the HRC and WFC These observations will be used to verify the accuracy of the latest pipeline flats and to monitor any changes Weekly coronagraphic monitoring is required to assess the changing position of the spots
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 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
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
FGS 10912
Trigonometric Calibration of the Distance Scale for Classical Novae
The distance scale for classical novae is important for understanding the stellar physics of their thermonuclear runaways, their contribution to Galactic nucleosynthesis, and their use as extragalactic standard candles Although it is known that there is a relationship between their absolute magnitudes at maximum light and their subsequent rates of decline--the well-known maximum-magnitude rate-of-decline {MMRD} relation--it is difficult to set the zero-point for the MMRD because of the very uncertain distances of Galactic novae We propose to measure precise trigonometric parallaxes for the quiescent remnants of the four nearest classical novae We will use the Fine Guidance Sensors, which are proven to be capable of measuring parallaxes with errors of ~0 2 mas, well below what is possible from the ground
ACS/WFC/WFPC2 10890
Morphologies of the Most Extreme High-Redshift Mid-IR-Luminous Galaxies
The formative phase of the most massive galaxies may be extremely luminous, characterized by intense star- and AGN-formation Till now, few such galaxies have been unambiguously identified at high redshift, restricting us to the study of low-redshift ultraluminous infrared galaxies as possible analogs We have recently discovered a sample of objects which may indeed represent this early phase in galaxy formation, and are undertaking an extensive multiwavelength study of this population These objects are bright at mid-IR wavelengths {F[24um]>0 8mJy}, but deep ground based imaging suggests extremely faint {and in some cases extended} optical counterparts {R~24-27} Deep K-band images show barely resolved galaxies Mid-infrared spectroscopy with Spitzer/IRS reveals that they have redshifts z ~ 2-2 5, suggesting bolometric luminosities ~10^{13-14}Lsun! We propose to obtain deep ACS F814W and NIC2 F160W images of these sources and their environs in order to determine kpc-scale morphologies and surface photometry for these galaxies The proposed observations will help us determine whether these extreme objects are merging systems, massive obscured starbursts {with obscuration on kpc scales!} or very reddened {locally obscured} AGN hosted by intrinsically low-luminosity galaxies
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 10885
Deep Photometry of NGC 1569: Understanding the Closest and Strongest Starburst of the Nearby Universe
Massive starbursts drive the evolution of galaxies at high redshift, but they can only be studied in detail in the nearby Universe where they are much rarer The dwarf irregular galaxy NGC 1569 at 2 2 Mpc is the closest example of a true starburst It has sustained exceptionally high star formation {SF} activity over the last Gyr, 2-3 orders of magnitude higher than in normal dwarf irregulars and spirals This SF has been probed extensively by previous HST observations that have reached just below the tip of the red giant branch {RGB} But the data have not been able to constrain the more ancient SF history {SFH}, so that our understanding remains very incomplete It is an open question whether NGC 1569 just started to form stars around 1 Gyr ago, or whether significant SF was already active before that We do not know what triggered the recent SF, how long the current intense SF activity has been going on, and whether such SF activity has been a more common occurrence in the past history of this galaxy More importantly, most of these questions remain unanswered for other starburst galaxies in the nearby and distant universe as well HST is the only telescope that can do the necessary crowded-field photometry to resolve these issues We propose to use ACS/WFC to build a deep I vs V-I color-magnitude diagram {CMD} that goes some 4 magnitudes deeper than the RGB tip This will detect and characterize the red clump {RC} and horizontal branch {HB} features The CMD will be interpreted by fitting synthetic CMDs constructed from evolutionary tracks to infer the SFH The joint constraints from the presence, apparent magnitude, and width of the RC, HB and RGB features will independently constrain both the age and metallicity of the old and evolved stellar population of NGC 1569, the presence of multiple bursts if any, and their duration and metallicity spread This will reveal the evolutionary status over cosmic time, and more generally will constrain the processes at play in the origin and evolution of galaxies This project is only possible because of the high sensitivity of ACS, and it can be done very efficiently because of the location of NGC 1569 in the CVZ Since NGC 1569 is so close, it may be the only nearby starburst for which these issues can be addressed in the foreseeable future
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/WFC 10835 Probing The Globular Cluster / Low Mass X-ray Binary Connection in
Early-type Galaxies At Low X-ray Combined high-resolution imaging from Hubble and Chandra {CXO} has
revolutionized our understanding of extragalactic low-mass X-ray
binaries {LMXBs} and globular clusters {GCs}, yet their connection in
early-type galaxies has remained unstudied at the luminosities of the
Galactic LMXBs in GCs
NGC 4278 and 3379 will be the first two
prototypical elliptical galaxies with deep CXO observations enabling the
study of LMXBs at lower luminosities
We propose mosaic ACS observations
of both galaxies {5 fields per galaxy} that will provide the most
comprehensive view into the connection between GCs and LMXBs in
early-type galaxies
We will detect ~860 and ~270 GCs in all of NGC 4278
and NGC 3379, respectively
These two galaxies will have among the
greatest number of detected GC-LMXBs to date {~130 & 50} and will
include the faintest GC-LMXBs in a normal early-type galaxy
We will
measure the fraction of GCs which contain LMXBs, as a function of X-ray
luminosity, galactocentric distance, color, and GC half-light radius
Using the radial profiles of optical light, GCs, and LMXBs, we will
determine the percentage of field LMXBs which may have originated in
GCs
We will use the measured GC properties over the entire extent of
both galaxies to constrain theories of GC formation and evolution
ACS/WFC 10826 Galaxy Evolution During Half the Age of the Universe: ACS imaging of
rich galaxy clusters Detailed studies of nearby galaxies {z<0
05} show that galaxies have
very complex histories of formation and evolution involving mergers,
bursts of star formation, and morphological changes
Even so, the global
properties of the galaxies {radii, luminosities, rotation velocities,
velocity dispersions, and absorption line strengths} follow a number of
very tight {empirical} scaling relations, e
g
the Tully-Fisher relation
and the Fundamental Plane {FP}
We use the scaling relations plus
quantative morphological measures for galaxy clusters up to z=1 to
constrain models for galaxy evolution
Here we request 24 orbits to
obtain ACS imaging of the remaining three clusters in our sample at
z~0
7-1
0
High resolution imaging of the clusters is critical for our
study of star formation histories and structural evolution in dense
environments since z<1
We have previously obtained deep spectroscopic
observations of the clusters with Gemini
The data will provide samples
large enough to establish the slope of the FP for each cluster
With
multiple clusters at similar redshifts, we can probe evolutionary
differences within a single epoch in order to decouple changes due to
different environments
Our two other high-z clusters exhibit different
chemical enrichment histories, which we argue are due to the different
merging histories of these clusters
ACS/WFC 10816 The Formation History of Andromeda's Extended Metal-Poor Halo We propose deep ACS imaging in the outer spheroid of the Andromeda
galaxy, in order to measure the star formation history of its true halo
For the past 20 years, nearly all studies of the Andromeda "halo" were
focused on the spheroid within 30 kpc of the galaxy's center, a region
now known to host significant substructure and populations with high
metallicity and intermediate ages
However, two groups have recently
discovered an extended metal-poor halo beyond 30 kpc; this population is
distinct in its surface-brightness profile, abundance distribution, and
kinematics
In earlier cycles, we obtained deep images of the inner
spheroid {11 kpc on the minor axis}, outer disk {25 kpc on the major
axis}, and giant tidal stream, yielding the complete star formation
history in each field
We now propose deep ACS imaging of 4 fields
bracketing this 30 kpc transition point in the spheroid, so that the
inner spheroid and the extended halo populations can be disentangled,
enabling a reconstruction of the star formation history in the halo
A
wide age distribution in the halo, as found in the inner spheroid, would
imply the halo was assembled through ongoing accretion of satellite
galaxies, while a uniformly old population would be a strong indication
that the halo was formed during the early rapid collapse of the
Andromeda proto-galaxy
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 10798 Dark Halos and Substructure from Arcs & Einstein Rings The surface brightness distribution of extended gravitationally lensed
arcs and Einstein rings contains super-resolved information about the
lensed object, and, more excitingly, about the smooth and clumpy mass
distribution of the lens galaxies
The source and lens information can
non-parametrically be separated, resulting in a direct "gravitational
image" of the inner mass- distribution of cosmologically-distant
galaxies {Koopmans 2005; Koopmans et al
2006 [astro- ph/0601628]}
With
this goal in mind, we propose deep HST ACS-F555W/F814W and NICMOS- F160W
WFC imaging of 20 new gravitational-lens systems with spatially resolved
lensed sources, of the 35 new lens systems discovered by the Sloan Lens
ACS Survey {Bolton et al
2005} so far, 15 of which are being imaged in
Cycle-14
Each system has been selected from the SDSS and confirmed in
two time-efficient HST-ACS snapshot programs {cycle 13&14}
High-
fidelity multi-color HST images are required {not delivered by the 420s
snapshots} to isolate these lensed images {properly cleaned, dithered
and extinction-corrected} from the lens galaxy surface brightness
distribution, and apply our "gravitational maging" technique
Our sample
of 35 early-type lens galaxies to date is by far the largest, still
growing, and most uniformly selected
This minimizes selection biases
and small-number statistics, compared to smaller, often serendipitously
discovered, samples
Moreover, using the WFC provides information on the
field around the lens, higher S/N and a better understood PSF, compared
with the HRC, and one retains high spatial resolution through drizzling
The sample of galaxy mass distributions - determined through this method
from the arcs and Einstein ring HST images - will be studied to: {i}
measure the smooth mass distribution of the lens galaxies {dark and
luminous mass are separated using the HST images and the stellar M/L
values derived from a joint stellar-dynamical analysis of each system};
{ii} quantify statistically and individually the incidence of mass-
substructure {with or without obvious luminous counter-parts such as
dwarf galaxies}
Since dark-matter substructure could be more prevalent
at higher redshift, both results provide a direct test of this
prediction of the CDM hierarchical structure-formation model
ACS/WFC 10794 Direct Age Determination of the dE Galaxies NGC 147 and NGC 185 Dwarf elliptical {dE} galaxies form some of the most numerous galaxies
in the universe, yet their origins remain a mystery
The most popular
formation scenarios are that dEs are either ancient, primordial objects,
or the recent remnants of disrupted progenitor galaxies
These scenarios
predict significantly different ratios of old and intermediate age
stars
Stellar population characteristics can therefore discriminate
between these scenarios
Previous spectroscopic work based on line
strengths has had too many uncertainties to uniquely infer the stellar
populations
Resolved color magnitude diagrams are needed instead
Since
dE galaxies generally do not have stars younger than 1 Gyr, resolving
the main sequence turnoff is required to directly quantify the star
formation histories
Only ACS on HST can reach this depth, and it can
only do so for the nearest two dE galaxies in the Local Group: the M31
dE satellites NGC 147 and NGC 185
Their main sequence turnoffs are
expected to be at an apparent magnitude of V=29; we request F606W/F814W
imaging one half magnitude fainter than this limit {and more than four
magnitudes fainter than the deepest previous dE observations}
This will
quantify the ratio of old to intermediate-age stars and will allow us to
discriminate between the competing models of dE formation
On-going
Keck/DEIMOS spectroscopy of several hundred red giant stars in each of
these two dE galaxies, coupled with dynamical modeling and spectral
synthesis, will complement the ACS measurement by providing information
on chemical abundance patterns, dark matter content and internal
dynamics
The proposed ACS data will be the first to directly quantify
the onset and duration of star formation episodes in any dE galaxy
This
measurement can only be done with HST/ACS, and it can only be done for
these two galaxies in the dE class
This project will therefore be
unique, and will be the most comprehensive study to date of any dE
galaxy
ACS/WFC 10633 GRB afterglows and host galaxies at very high redshifts Cosmology is beginning to constrain the nature of the earliest stars and
galaxies to form in the universe, but direct observation of galaxies at
z>6 remains highly challenging due to their scarcity, intrinsically
small size, and high luminosity distance
GRB afterglows, thanks to
their extreme luminosities, offer the possibility of circumventing these
normal constraints by providing redshifts and spectral information which
couldn't be obtained by direct observation of the hosts themselves
In
addition, the association of GRBs with massive stars means that they are
a tracer of star formation, and that their hosts are likely responsible
for a large proportion of the ionizing radiation during that era
Our
collaboration is mounting a campaign to rapidly identify and study
candidate very high redshift bursts, bringing to bear a network of 2, 4
and 8m telescopes with nIR instrumentation
The capabilities of Swift to
detect faint, distant GRBs, and to report accurate positions for many
bursts in near real-time makes our program now feasible
HST is crucial
to this endeavour, allowing us {a} to monitor the late time afterglows
and hence compare them to lower-z bursts and test the use of GRBs as
standard candles; and {b} characterise the basic properties,
luminosities, and in some cases morphologies, of the hosts, which is
essential to understanding these primordial galaxies and their
relationship to other populations
ACS/HRC 10627 A Snapshot Survey of Post-AGB Objects and Proto-Planetary Nebulae We propose an ACS/HRC snapshot survey of 50 post-AGB sources, objects
which have evolved from the AGB but may or may not become planetary
nebulae {PNe}
This survey will complement existing HST images of
proto-planetary nebulae {PPNe} and PNe in addressing circumstellar
envelope morphology as a function of: 1} the progenitor star mass; 2}
the chemical composition; and 3} evolutionary stage
We will connect the
observed diversity of nebualar shapes with the main physical and
chemical conditions characterizing post-AGB objects, to identify the
mechanism that breaks the symmetry of AGB mass loss
To our knowledge,
no previous HST projects have been specifically designed to address this
issue
From our database of 360 post-AGB candidates, we have selected
approximately 50 targets, none of which have been or are being observed
with HST, to sample different central star masses, chemical
compositions, and evolutionary stages, uniformly across the sky
These
new data will also provide important constraints to a quantitative
analysis of Spitzer Space Telescope {SST} observations planned for a
similar sample of objects
We will model the HST images and SST spectra
using our axisymmetric dust code 2-Dust, to derive dust density
distributions, pole to equator density ratios, dust shell masses,
inclination angles as well as dust composition
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports
of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated
) HSTARS:
10597 - GSacq((2,1,1) failed due to Seaarch Radius Limit exceeded on FGS 1
GSacq(2,1,1) failed at 17:48:29 due to search radius limit exceeded for
FGS 1
Received 486 ESB a05 "Exceeded SRL"
OBAD 1 RSS unavailable until engineering dump
OBAD 2 RSS 5
66 a/s
MAP RSS 7
17 a/s 10599 - REAcq (2,1,1) failed due to Search Radius Limit Exceeded on FGS 1
At AOS (005/19:24:15) REAcq (2,1,1) scheduled at 005/19:20:13-19:27:26
failed due to Search Radius Limit Exceeded on FGS 1
Received 486 ESB
message a05 "Exceeded_SRL"
OBAD #1 unavailable due to LOS
OBAD #2: V1 -1
17, V2 -4
23, V3 1
15, RSS 4
54
OBAD MAP: V1 2
22, V2 10
99, V3 2
32, RSS 11
46 10600 - GSAcq(2,1,2) results in fine lock (2,0,2)
Upon acquisition of signal at 005/23:27:35, the GSAcq(2,1,2) scheduled
at 005/22:48:15 - 22:56:20 had resulted in fine lock backup (2,0,2)
using FGS-2 due to (QF1STOPF) stop flag indication on FGS-1
Pre-acquisition OBADs showed (RSS) attitude correction values of 5173
60
and 6
80 arcseconds
Post-acquisition OBAD/MAP not scheduled
Subsequent
REacq(2,1,2) scheduled at 006/00:03:38 also resulted in fine lock backup
(2,0,2) using FGS-2 due to stop flag on FGS-1
10601 - GSacq(2,1,1) failed due to search radius limit exceeded
During LOS GSacq(2,1,1) scheduled at 006/22:31:10 failed due to search
radius limit exceeded on FGS 1
Subsequent REacq(2,1,1) at 007/00:05:26
also failed to RGA Hold (Gyro Control) due to (QF1SRLEX) search radius
limit exceeded on FGS-1
One 486 ESB "a05" (FGS Coarse Track failed -
Search Radius Limit Exceeded) was received at 007/00:09:38
Pre-acquisition OBADs showed (RSS) values of 2986
84 and 12
76
arcseconds
Post-acq OBAD/MAP showed (RSS) value of 16
81 arcseconds
10602 - REacq(1,3,3) failed to RGA Hold (Gyro Control)
Upon acquisition of signal at 008/06:33:31, the REacq(1,3,3)scheduled at
008/05:10:57 - 05:19:02 was observed to have failed to RGA Hold due to
(QF1STOPF) stop flag indication on FGS-1
Pre-acquisition OBADs (RSS)
attitude correction values not available due to LOS
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST:
17987-0 - Disable Aero Torque Compensation COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None) FGS GSacq 25 23
FGS REacq 12 09
OBAD with Maneuver 76 76 SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: Flash Report: Aero compensation disabled
At approximately 2007/005 14:35, aerodynamic torque compensation was
disabled per Ops Request 17987
The aero compensation has been
performing as expected, but several recent guide star acquisition
failures and the currently low values of aero torque disturbances
motivated temporarily disabling it
The computed aero torques continue
to be monitored via TMDIAGs
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