HUBBLE
SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY
REPORT # 4544
PERIOD
COVERED: UT February 08,09,10, 2007 (DOY 039,040,041)
OBSERVATIONS
SCHEDULED
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}.
NIC1/NIC2/NIC3
8795
NICMOS Post-SAA calibration - CR Persistence Part 6
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 i
mages.
Each observation will need its own CRMAP, as different SAA
passages
leave different imprints on the NICMOS detectors.
NIC3
11195
Morphologies
of the Most Extreme High-Redshift Mid-IR-luminous Galaxies
II:
The `Bump' Sources
The
formative phase of some 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,
and thus far we have been restricted to studying the
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 optically
extremely
faint {R>26} but nevertheless bright at mid-infrared
wavelengths
{F[24um] > 0.5 mJy}. Mid-infrared spectroscopy with
Spitzer/IRS
reveals that they have redshifts z~2, implying luminosities
~1E13
Lsun. Their mid-IR SEDs fall into two broad, perhaps overlapping,
categories.
Sources with brighter F[24um] exhibit power-law SEDs and SiO
absorption
features in their mid-IR spectra characteristic of AGN,
whereas
those with fainter F[24um] show a "bump" characteristic of the
redshifted
1.6um peak from a stellar population, and PAH emission
characteristic
of starformation. We have begun obtaining HST images of
the
brighter sources in Cycle 15 to obtain identifications and determine
kpc-scale
morphologies for these galaxies. Here, we aim to target the
second
class {the "bump" sources} with the goal of determining if these
constitute
morphologically different objects, or simply a "low-AGN"
state
of the brighter class. The proposed observations will help us
determine
whether these objects are merging systems, massive obscured
starbursts
{with obscuration on kpc scales!} or very reddened {locally
obscured}
AGN hosted by intrinsically low-luminosity galaxies.
S/C
11320
NICMOS
Focus Monitoring Cycle 16
This
program is a version of the standard focus sweep used since cycle
7.
It has been modified to go deeper and uses more narrow filters for
improved
focus determination. A new source was added in Cycle 14 in
order
to accommodate 2-gyro mode: the open cluster NGC1850. This source
is
part of the current proposal. The old target, the open cluster
NGC3603,
will be used whenever available and the new target used to fill
the
periods when NGC3603 is not visible. Steps: a) Use refined target
field
positions as determined from cycle 7 calibrations b) Use
MULTIACCUM
sequences of sufficient dynamic range to account for defocus
c)
Do a 17-point focus sweep, +/- 8mm about the PAM mechanical zeropoint
for
each cameras 1 and 2, in 1.0mm steps. For NIC3 we step from -0.5mm
to
-9.5mm relative to mechanical zero, in steps of 1.0mm. d) Use PAM X/Y
tilt
and OTA offset slew compensations refined from previous focus
monitoring/optical
alignment activities
WFPC2
10827
Imaging
Polarimetry of the Seyfert 1 MCG-6-30-15: Clues to the Structure
of
Warm Absorbers
Imaging
polarimetry at high spatial resolution, which is only possible
with
HST, offers a potentially powerful new tool for determining the
orientation
and geometry of AGN containing warm absorbers. These
absorbed
AGN tend to be more highly polarized than unabsorbed Type 1s,
but
less polarized than Type 2s. If the polarized flux is due to a polar
scattering
region as seen in polarized flux images of Seyfert 2s,
imaging
polarimetry of nearby absorbed Type 1 objects using HST can
detect
and resolve these scattering regions. We propose to make the
first
HST imaging polarimetry study of an absorbed Seyfert 1 by
obtaining
broad-band polarization images with WFPC2 of the prototypical
"dusty
warm absorber" in MCG-6-30-15 {z=0.0077, D~33 Mpc}. We will
measure
the wavelength dependence of the polarized light free from
dilution
by the host galaxy starlight in order to assess whether the
polarization
is due to a nuclear scattering region or dichroic
transmission
through the absorbing dust. These observations will enable
us
to {1} use the wavelength dependence of unresolved polarized flux to
understand
the properties of the absorbing dust suggested by X-ray
spectral
features attributed to Fe~I absorption, and {2} test whether
polarization
in warm absorbers is due to resolved polar scattering
regions.
Resolving the scattering region in a moderately polarized
Seyfert
1 such as MCG-6-30-15 will let us answer the question of whether
line-of-sight
inclination can be directly linked to observed outflow
characteristics,
as suggested by the most recent unified models of AGN
outflows.
WFPC2
11103
A
Snapshot Survey of The Most Massive Clusters of Galaxies
We
propose the continuation of our highly successful SNAPshot survey of
a
sample of 125 very X-ray luminous clusters in the redshift range
0.3-0.7.
As demonstrated by the 25 snapshots obtained so far in Cycle14
and
Cycle15 these systems frequently exhibit strong gravitational
lensing
as well as spectacular examples of violent galaxy interactions.
The
proposed observations will provide important constraints on the
cluster
mass distributions, the physical nature of galaxy-galaxy and
galaxy-gas
interactions in cluster cores, and a set of optically bright,
lensed
galaxies for further 8-10m spectroscopy. All of our primary
science
goals require only the detection and characterization of
high-surface-brightness
features and are thus achievable even at the
reduced
sensitivity of WFPC2. Because of their high redshift and thus
compact
angular scale our target clusters are less adversely affected by
the
smaller field of view of WFPC2 than more nearby systems.
Acknowledging
the broad community interest in this sample we waive our
data
rights for these observations. Due to a clerical error at STScI our
approved
Cycle15 SNAP program was barred from execution for 3 months and
only
6 observations have been performed to date - reinstating this SNAP
at
Cycle16 priority is of paramount importance to reach meaningful
statistics.
WFPC2
11202
The
Structure of Early-type Galaxies: 0.1-100 Effective Radii
The
structure, formation and evolution of early-type galaxies is still
largely
an open problem in cosmology: how does the Universe evolve from
large
linear scales dominated by dark matter to the highly non-linear
scales
of galaxies, where baryons and dark matter both play important,
interacting,
roles? To understand the complex physical processes
involved
in their formation scenario, and why they have the tight
scaling
relations that we observe today {e.g. the Fundamental Plane}, it
is
critically important not only to understand their stellar structure,
but
also their dark-matter distribution from the smallest to the largest
scales.
Over the last three years the SLACS collaboration has developed
a
toolbox to tackle these issues in a unique and encompassing way by
combining
new non-parametric strong lensing techniques, stellar
dynamics,
and most recently weak gravitational lensing, with
high-quality
Hubble Space Telescope imaging and VLT/Keck spectroscopic
data
of early-type lens systems. This allows us to break degeneracies
that
are inherent to each of these techniques separately and probe the
mass
structure of early-type galaxies from 0.1 to 100 effective radii.
The
large dynamic range to which lensing is sensitive allows us both to
probe
the clumpy substructure of these galaxies, as well as their
low-density
outer haloes. These methods have convincingly been
demonstrated,
by our team, using smaller pilot-samples of SLACS lens
systems
with HST data. In this proposal, we request observing time with
WFPC2
and NICMOS to observe 53 strong lens systems from SLACS, to obtain
complete
multi-color imaging for each system. This would bring the total
number
of SLACS lens systems to 87 with completed HST imaging and
effectively
doubles the known number of galaxy-scale strong lenses. The
deep
HST images enable us to fully exploit our new techniques, beat down
low-number
statistics, and probe the structure and evolution of
early-type
galaxies, not only with a uniform data-set an order of
magnitude
larger than what is available now, but also with a fully
coherent
and self-consistent methodological approach!
FLIGHT
OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant
Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports
of
potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated.)
HSTARS:
11182
- GSacq(1,3,1) resulted in Fine Lock Backup(1,0,1)
GSacq(1,3,1) scheduled at 039/19:56:31 resulted in fine lock
backup
(1,0,1). At 20:00:37 stop flags QF3STOPF and QSTOP were received
for FGS
3. OBAD2 at 19:51:27 had an RSS value of 5.96 a-s and the map at
20:03:51 showed errors of V1= 1.97, V2= -12.47, V3= 7.79, and RSS=
14.83.
The REacq(1,3,1) at 21:30:05 also resulted in FLBU (1,0,1).
11183
- OBAD Failed Identification (ESB 1902)
The Map using trackers FHST-1 and FHST-3 scheduled at 040/00:57:57
failed. ESB message 1902 "OBAD Failed Identification"
was received. The
GSacq at 00:50:39 was successful.
COMPLETED
OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED
OPS NOTES: (None)
SCHEDULED
SUCCESSFUL
FGS
GSacq
25
25
FGS
REacq
19
19
OBAD
with Maneuver 88
87
SIGNIFICANT
EVENTS: (None)