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============================================================================== TOPIC: Daily Report #5109
== 1 of 1 == Date: Thurs, Jun 3 2010 5:04 am From: "Bassford, Lynn"
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT #5109
PERIOD COVERED: 5am June 2 - 5am June 3, 2010 (DOY 153/09:00z-154/09:00z)
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated )
HSTARS: (None)
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL
FGS GSAcq 7 7 FGS REAcq 9 9 OBAD with Maneuver 6 6
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED:
ACS/WFC 11995
CCD Daily Monitor (Part 2)
This program comprises basic tests for measuring the read noise and dark current of the ACS WFC and for tracking the growth of hot pixels The recorded frames are used to create bias and dark reference images for science data reduction and calibration This program will be executed four days per week (Mon, Wed, Fri, Sun) for the duration of Cycle 17 To facilitate scheduling, this program is split into three proposals This proposal covers 320 orbits (20 weeks) from 1 February 2010 to 20 June 2010
COS/FUV 11686
The Cosmological Impact of AGN Outflows: Measuring Absolute Abundances and Kinetic Luminosities
AGN outflows are increasingly invoked as a major contributor to the formation and evolution of supermassive black holes, their host galaxies, the surrounding IGM, and cluster cooling flows Our HST/COS proposal will determine reliable absolute chemical abundances in six AGN outflows, which influences several of the processes mentioned above To date there is only one such determination, done by our team on Mrk 279 using 16 HST/STIS orbits and 100 ksec of FUSE time The advent of COS and its high sensitivity allows us to choose among fainter objects at redshifts high enough to preclude the need for FUSE This will allow us to determine the absolute abundances for six AGN (all fainter than Mrk 279) using only 40 HST COS orbits This will put abundances studies in AGN on a firm footing, an elusive goal for the past four decades In addition, prior FUSE observations of four of these targets indicate that it is probable that the COS observations will detect troughs from excited levels of C III These will allow us to measure the distances of the outflows and thereby determine their kinetic luminosity, a major goal in AGN feedback research
We will use our state of the art column density extraction methods and velocity-dependent photoionization models to determine the abundances and kinetic luminosity Previous AGN outflow projects suffered from the constraints of deciding what science we could do using ONE of the handful of bright targets that were observable With COS we can choose the best sample for our experiment As an added bonus, most of the spectral range of our targets has not been observed previously, greatly increasing the discovery phase space
COS/FUV/WFC3/UVIS/IR 11519
COS-GTO: Great Wall Tomography
This is a program to observe several targets behind the Great Wall (GW), a typical galaxy filament in the Universe The approach is to observe a series of targets in one area of sky to perform a "cosmic tomography" in a 10 Mpc^2 region which includes sightlines through regions of varying galaxy density from no galaxies within 3 Mpc of the sight line to a dozen or more galaxies within 3 Mpc of the sight line The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) plus various CfA redshift surveys are nearly complete at Great Wall distances to 0 1-0 25L*, making the available galaxy survey material sufficient for this study This program will address several science drivers, including probing the typical covering factor of warm, photoionized gas in galaxy filaments and the metallicity of such gas and how far it is spread from large and small galaxies Preliminary studies suggest such material extends ~800 kpc from the nearest L* galaxy (even if that galaxy is not the source of the gas) and ~250 kpc from the nearest 0 1L* galaxy (H0 assumed to be 70 km/s/Mpc)
COS/NUV/FUV 11718
The Stellar Halos of Dwarf Galaxies
The metal-poor stellar halo is the oldest extended structure in the Galaxy Such halos are thought to form through hierarchical merging, and contain stars pulled from accreted subhalos The diffuse stellar halo therefore stores information about the prop reties of the accreted galaxies (i e , their orbits, stellar masses, and metallicities) It is therefore unsurprising that stellar halos have become a popular probe of the early epoch of galaxy formation
Almost all current work on stellar halos has focused on massive galaxies, however We propose to extend the work on stellar halos to much lower mass scales, by studying the halos of faint dwarf galaxies By taking halo studies into the dwarf galaxy regime, we can probe exceptionally small mass scales for the accreted halos At these mass scales the effects of reionization and supernova feedback have the largest impact on the galaxy population Stellar halos of dwarf galaxies are therefore a sensitive probe of the key processes needed to resolve the lack of substructure observed at low masses
We are requesting two far-field ACS pointings for the three closest isolated nearby dwarf irregular galaxies whose inner halos have already been mapped with the ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey Treasury These outer fields will allow us to trace the halo out to roughly half the virial radius, further than any previous study We will use the resulting distribution of halo stars (1) to unambiguously measure the structure of the stellar halo, with minimal contamination from the main galaxy; (2) to constrain the flattening of the stellar halo; (3) to measure the metallicity of halo stars as a function of radius; (4) to correlate any changes in halo profile with changes in metallicity The resulting data will constrain models of halo accretion and the epoch of reionization
STIS/CC 11845
CCD Dark Monitor Part 2
Monitor the darks for the STIS CCD
STIS/CC 11847
CCD Bias Monitor-Part 2
Monitor the bias in the 1x1, 1x2, 2x1, and 2x2 bin settings at gain=1, and 1x1 at gain = 4, to build up high-S/N superbiases and track the evolution of hot columns
WFC3/ACS/UVIS 11613
GHOSTS: Stellar Outskirts of Massive Spiral Galaxies
We propose to continue our highly successful GHOSTS HST survey of the resolved stellar populations of nearby, massive disk galaxies using SNAPs These observations provide star counts and color-magnitude diagrams 2-3 magnitudes below the tip of the Red Giant Branch of the outer disk and halo of each galaxy We will measure the metallicity distribution functions and stellar density profiles from star counts down to very low average surface brightnesses, equivalent to ~32 V-mag per square arcsec
This proposal will substantially improve our unique sampling of galaxy outskirts Our targets cover a range in galaxy mass, luminosity, inclination, and morphology As a function of these galaxy properties, this survey provides: - the most extensive, systematic measurement of radial light profiles and axial ratios of the diffuse stellar halos and outer disks of spiral galaxies; - a comprehensive analysis of halo metallicity distributions as function of galaxy type and position within the galaxy; - an unprecedented study of the stellar metallicity and age distribution in the outer disk regions where the disk truncations occur; - the first comparative study of globular clusters and their field stellar populations
We will use these fossil records of the galaxy assembly process to test halo formation models within the hierarchical galaxy formation scheme
WFC3/UVIS 11905
WFC3 UVIS CCD Daily Monitor
The behavior of the WFC3 UVIS CCD will be monitored daily with a set of full-frame, four-amp bias and dark frames A smaller set of 2Kx4K subarray biases are acquired at less frequent intervals throughout the cycle to support subarray science observations The internals from this proposal, along with those from the anneal procedure (Proposal 11909), will be used to generate the necessary superbias and superdark reference files for the calibration pipeline (CDBS)
WFC3/UVIS 11908
Cycle 17: UVIS Bowtie Monitor
Ground testing revealed an intermittent hysteresis type effect in the UVIS detector (both CCDs) at the level of ~1%, lasting hours to days Initially found via an unexpected bowtie-shaped feature in flatfield ratios, subsequent lab tests on similar e2v devices have since shown that it is also present as simply an overall offset across the entire CCD, i e , a QE offset without any discernable pattern These lab tests have further revealed that overexposing the detector to count levels several times full well fills the traps and effectively neutralizes the bowtie Each visit in this proposal acquires a set of three 3x3 binned internal flatfields: the first unsaturated image will be used to detect any bowtie, the second, highly exposed image will neutralize the bowtie if it is present, and the final image will allow for verification that the bowtie is gone
============================================================================== TOPIC: Daily Report #5110
== 1 of 1 == Date: Fri, Jun 4 2010 5:53 am From: "Cooper, Joe"
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT #5110
PERIOD COVERED: 5am June 3 - 5am June 4, 2010 (DOY 154/09:00z-155/09:00z)
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated )
HSTARS: (None)
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL
FGS GSAcq 9 9 FGS REAcq 10 10 OBAD with Maneuver 8 8
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED:
ACS/WFC 12016
The Stars and Edge-on Disks of PDS 144: An Intermediate-Mass Analog of Wide T Tauri Multiple Stars
High-Inclination PMS stars are optimally oriented to measure disk size, height, to detect jets, and to directly probe disk composition Placing these data into evolutionary context requires dates for the systems and measurements of L bol, and extinction For such stars, X-ray data provide L x, but also N(H) and the total extinction FUV data measures L UV, and constrains the shape of the extinction curve Recent studies have suggested that the frequency of Jovian-mass planets is higher for systems with intermediate-mass stars, due to disk mass or composition While suitable low mass YSOs are well-represented in the Chandra and HST archives, similar data are lacking for higher mass systems We propose joint Chandra and HST imaging of PDS 144 to fill this gap
FGS 11704
The Ages of Globular Clusters and the Population II Distance Scale
Globular clusters are the oldest objects in the universe whose age can be accurately determined The dominant error in globular cluster age determinations is the uncertain Population II distance scale We propose to use FGS 1R to obtain parallaxes with an accuracy of 0 2 milliarcsecond for 9 main sequence stars with [Fe/H] < -1 5 This will determine the absolute magnitude of these stars with accuracies of 0 04 to 0 06mag This data will be used to determine the distance to 24 metal-poor globular clusters using main sequence fitting These distances (with errors of 0 05 mag) will be used to determine the ages of globular clusters using the luminosity of the subgiant branch as an age indicator This will yield absolute ages with an accuracy of 5%, about a factor of two improvement over current estimates Coupled with existing parallaxes for more metal-rich stars, we will be able to accurately determine the age for globular clusters over a wide range of metallicities in order to study the early formation history of the Milky Way and provide an independent estimate of the age of the universe
The Hipparcos database contains only 1 star with [Fe/H] < -1 4 and an absolute magnitude error less than 0 18 mag which is suitable for use in main sequence fitting Previous attempts at main sequence fitting to metal-poor globular clusters have had to rely on theoretical calibrations of the color of the main sequence Our HST parallax program will remove this source of possible systematic error and yield distances to metal-poor globular clusters which are significantly more accurate than possible with the current parallax data The HST parallax data will have errors which are 10 times smaller than the current parallax data Using the HST parallaxes, we will obtain main sequence fitting distances to 11 globular clusters which contain over 500 RR Lyrae stars This will allow us to calibrate the absolute magnitude of RR Lyrae stars, a commonly used Population II distance indicator
S/C 12046
COS FUV DCE Memory Dump
Whenever the FUV detector high voltage is on, count rate and current draw information is collected, monitored, and saved to DCE memory Every 10 msec the detector samples the currents from the HV power supplies (HVIA, HVIB) and the AUX power supply (AUXI) The last 1000 samples are saved in memory, along with a histogram of the number of occurrences of each current value
In the case of a HV transient (known as a "crackle" on FUSE), where one of these currents exceeds a preset threshold for a persistence time, the HV will shut down, and the DCE memory will be dumped and examined as part of the recovery procedure However, if the current exceeds the threshold for less than the persistence time (a "mini-crackle" in FUSE parlance), there is no way to know without dumping DCE memory By dumping and examining the histograms regularly, we will be able to monitor any changes in the rate of "mini-crackles" and thus learn something about the state of the detector
STIS/CC 11845
CCD Dark Monitor Part 2
Monitor the darks for the STIS CCD
STIS/CC 11847
CCD Bias Monitor-Part 2
Monitor the bias in the 1x1, 1x2, 2x1, and 2x2 bin settings at gain=1, and 1x1 at gain = 4, to build up high-S/N superbiases and track the evolution of hot columns
WFC3/ACS/UVIS 11613
GHOSTS: Stellar Outskirts of Massive Spiral Galaxies
We propose to continue our highly successful GHOSTS HST survey of the resolved stellar populations of nearby, massive disk galaxies using SNAPs These observations provide star counts and color-magnitude diagrams 2-3 magnitudes below the tip of the Red Giant Branch of the outer disk and halo of each galaxy We will measure the metallicity distribution functions and stellar density profiles from star counts down to very low average surface brightnesses, equivalent to ~32 V-mag per square arcsec
This proposal will substantially improve our unique sampling of galaxy outskirts Our targets cover a range in galaxy mass, luminosity, inclination, and morphology As a function of these galaxy properties, this survey provides: - the most extensive, systematic measurement of radial light profiles and axial ratios of the diffuse stellar halos and outer disks of spiral galaxies; - a comprehensive analysis of halo metallicity distributions as function of galaxy type and position within the galaxy; - an unprecedented study of the stellar metallicity and age distribution in the outer disk regions where the disk truncations occur; - the first comparative study of globular clusters and their field stellar populations
We will use these fossil records of the galaxy assembly process to test halo formation models within the hierarchical galaxy formation scheme
WFC3/ACS/UVIS/IR 11570
Narrowing in on the Hubble Constant and Dark Energy
A measurement of the Hubble constant to a precision of a few percent would be a powerful aid to the investigation of the nature of dark energy and a potent "end-to end" test of the present cosmological model In Cycle 15 we constructed a new streamlined distance ladder utilizing high- quality type Ia supernova data and observations of Cepheids with HST in the near-IR to minimize the dominant sources of systematic uncertainty in past measurements of the Hubble constant and reduce its total uncertainty to a little under 5% Here we propose to exploit this new route to reduce the remaining uncertainty by more than 30%, translating into an equal reduction in the uncertainty of the equation of state of dark energy We propose three sets of observations to reach this goal: a mosaic of NGC 4258 with WFC3 in F160W to triple its sample of long period Cepheids, WFC3/F160W observations of the 6 ideal SN Ia hosts to triple their samples of Cepheids, and observations of NGC 5584 the host of a new SN Ia, SN 2007af, to discover and measure its Cepheids and begin expanding the small set of SN Ia luminosity calibrations These observations would provide the bulk of a coordinated program aimed at making the measurement of the Hubble constant one of the leading constraints on dark energy
WFC3/IR 11631
Binary Brown Dwarfs and the L/T Transition
Brown dwarfs traverse spectral types M, L and T as their atmospheric structure evolves and they cool into oblivion This SNAPSHOT program will obtain WFC3-IR images of 45 nearby late-L and early-T dwarfs to investigate the nature of the L/T transition Recent analyses have suggested that a substantial proportion of late-L and early-T dwarfs are binaries, comprised of an L dwarf primary and T dwarf secondary WFC3-IR observations will let us quantify this suggestion by expanding coverage to a much larger sample, and permitting comparison of the L/T binary fraction against ?normal? ultracool dwarfs Only eight L/T binaries are currently known, including several that are poorly resolved: we anticipate at least doubling the number of resolved systems The photometric characteristics of additional resolved systems will be crucial to constraining theoretical models of these late-type ultracool dwarfs Finally, our data will also be eminently suited to searching for extremely low luminosity companions, potentially even reaching the Y dwarf regime
WFC3/IR 11712
Calibration of Surface Brightness Fluctuations for WFC3/IR
We aim to characterize galaxy surface brightness fluctuations (SBF), and calibrate the SBF distance method, in the F110W and F160W filters of the Wide Field Camera 3 IR channel Because of the very high throughput of F110W and the good match of F160W to the standard H band, we anticipate that both of these filters will be popular choices for galaxy observations with WFC3/IR The SBF signal is typically an order of magnitude brighter in the near-IR than in the optical, and the characteristics (sensitivity, FOV, cosmetics) of the WFC3/IR channel will be enormously more efficient for SBF measurements than previously available near-IR cameras As a result, our proposed SBF calibration will allow accurate distance derivation whenever an early-type or bulge-dominated galaxy is observed out to a distance of 150 Mpc or more (i e , out to the Hubble flow) in the calibrated passbands For individual galaxy observations, an accurate distance is useful for establishing absolute luminosities, black hole masses, linear sizes, etc Eventually, once a large number of galaxies have been observed across the sky with WFC3/IR, this SBF calibration will enable accurate mapping of the total mass density distribution in the local universe using the data available in the HST archive The proposed observations will have additional important scientific value; in particular, we highlight their usefulness for understanding the nature of multimodal globular cluster color distributions in giant elliptical galaxies
WFC3/IR/S/C 11929
IR Dark Current Monitor
Analyses of ground test data showed that dark current signals are more reliably removed from science data using darks taken with the same exposure sequences as the science data, than with a single dark current image scaled by desired exposure time Therefore, dark current images must be collected using all sample sequences that will be used in science observations These observations will be used to monitor changes in the dark current of the WFC3-IR channel on a day-to-day basis, and to build calibration dark current ramps for each of the sample sequences to be used by Gos in Cycle 17 For each sample sequence/array size combination, a median ramp will be created and delivered to the calibration database system (CDBS)
WFC3/UV/IR 11573
Investigating Post-Equinox Atmospheric Changes on Uranus
Uranus is now past its 7 December 2007 equinox The large seasonal phase shift expected from its long radiative time constant implies that it should now be in the process of reversing its hemispheric asymmetries in cloud band structure and zonal circulation Many changes already observed -- the development of the first visible-wavelength dark spot, discovered in Cycle 15, the fading of the south polar cap, and the development of a new northern bright band while the southern band fades -- may all be indicative of the expected reversal We propose a detailed characterization of Uranus' current seasonal response with a 9-orbit program consisting of 3 orbits of WFC3 imaging of cloud bands and dark spots, and 6 orbits of high signal-to-noise imaging using the F845M filter, capable of tracking bright discrete cloud features Filters between 0 467 and 1 7 microns will provide vertical sensing depths scanning through the pressure range where the putative methane and deeper H2S clouds might plausibly exist and provide strong constraints on their contributions and parent gas mixing ratios These observations have unique combinations of spectral range and resolution with needed temporal sampling and spatial resolution not available from groundbased observations
WFC3/UVIS 11643
A Timeline for Early-Type Galaxy Formation: Mapping the Evolution of Star Formation, Globular Clusters, Dust, and Black Holes
While considerable effort has been devoted to statistical studies of the origin of the red sequence of galaxies, there has been relatively little direct exploration of galaxies transforming from late to early types Such galaxies are identified by their post-starburst spectra, bulge- dominated, tidally-disturbed morphologies, and current lack of gas We are constructing the first detailed timeline of their evolution onto the red sequence, pinpointing when star formation ends, nuclear activity ceases, globular clusters form, and the bulk of the merging progenitors' dust disappears Here we propose to obtain HST and Chandra imaging of nine galaxies, whose wide range of post-starburst ages we have precisely dated with a new UV-optical technique and for which we were awarded Spitzer time We will address 1) whether the black hole-bulge mass relation arises from nuclear feedback, 2) whether the bimodality of globular cluster colors is due to young clusters produced in galaxy mergers, and 3) what happens to the dust when late types merge to form an early type
WFC3/UVIS 11905
WFC3 UVIS CCD Daily Monitor
The behavior of the WFC3 UVIS CCD will be monitored daily with a set of full-frame, four-amp bias and dark frames A smaller set of 2Kx4K subarray biases are acquired at less frequent intervals throughout the cycle to support subarray science observations The internals from this proposal, along with those from the anneal procedure (Proposal 11909), will be used to generate the necessary superbias and superdark reference files for the calibration pipeline (CDBS)
WFC3/UVIS 11908
Cycle 17: UVIS Bowtie Monitor
Ground testing revealed an intermittent hysteresis type effect in the UVIS detector (both CCDs) at the level of ~1%, lasting hours to days Initially found via an unexpected bowtie-shaped feature in flatfield ratios, subsequent lab tests on similar e2v devices have since shown that it is also present as simply an overall offset across the entire CCD, i e , a QE offset without any discernable pattern These lab tests have further revealed that overexposing the detector to count levels several times full well fills the traps and effectively neutralizes the bowtie Each visit in this proposal acquires a set of three 3x3 binned internal flatfields: the first unsaturated image will be used to detect any bowtie, the second, highly exposed image will neutralize the bowtie if it is present, and the final image will allow for verification that the bowtie is gone
WFC3/UVIS 11912
UVIS Internal Flats
This proposal will be used to assess the stability of the flat field structure for the UVIS detector throughout the 15 months of Cycle 17 The data will be used to generate on-orbit updates for the delta-flat field reference files used in the WFC3 calibration pipeline, if significant changes in the flat structure are seen
============================================================================== TOPIC: Daily Report #5111
== 1 of 1 == Date: Mon, Jun 7 2010 4:42 am From: "Cooper, Joe"
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT #5111
PERIOD COVERED: 5am June 4 - 5am June 7, 2010 (DOY 155/09:00z-158/09:00z)
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated )
HSTARS:
12294 - GSAcq(2,1,1) scheduled at 156/15:48:00z and REAcq(2,1,1) scheduled at 156/17:25:05z and at 156/19:00:56z was observed to have resulted in fine lock backup (2,0,2) using FGS-2
Observations possibly affected: COS 198 - 213, Proposal ID#11536
12295 - GSAcq(2,1,1) scheduled at 157/03:37:28z failed to fine lock backup on FGS 2
Observations possibly affected: WFC3 147 - 149, Proposal ID#11662
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL
FGS GSAcq 26 26 FGS REAcq 21 21 OBAD with Maneuver 24 24
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED:
WFC3/UVIS 12018
Ultra-Luminous X-Ray Sources in the Most Metal-Poor Galaxies
There is growing observational and theoretical evidence to suggest that Ultra-Luminous X-ray sources (ULX) form preferentially in low metallicity environments Here we propose a survey of 27 nearby (< 30Mpc) star-forming Extremely Metal Poor Galaxies (Z<5% solar) There are almost no X-ray observations of such low abundance galaxies (3 in the Chandra archive) These are the most metal-deficient galaxies known, and a logical place to find ULX if they favor metal-poor systems We plan to test recent population synthesis models which predict that ULX should be very numerous in metal-poor galaxies We will also test the hypothesis that ULX form in massive young star clusters, and ask for HST time to obtain the necessary imaging data
ACS/WFC 12016
The Stars and Edge-on Disks of PDS 144: An Intermediate-Mass Analog of Wide T Tauri Multiple Stars
High-Inclination PMS stars are optimally oriented to measure disk size, height, to detect jets, and to directly probe disk composition Placing these data into evolutionary context requires dates for the systems and measurements of L bol, and extinction For such stars, X-ray data provide L x, but also N(H) and the total extinction FUV data measures L UV, and constrains the shape of the extinction curve Recent studies have suggested that the frequency of Jovian-mass planets is higher for systems with intermediate-mass stars, due to disk mass or composition While suitable low mass YSOs are well-represented in the Chandra and HST archives, similar data are lacking for higher mass systems We propose joint Chandra and HST imaging of PDS 144 to fill this gap
ACS/WFC 11995
CCD Daily Monitor (Part 2)
This program comprises basic tests for measuring the read noise and dark current of the ACS WFC and for tracking the growth of hot pixels The recorded frames are used to create bias and dark reference images for science data reduction and calibration This program will be executed four days per week (Mon, Wed, Fri, Sun) for the duration of Cycle 17 To facilitate scheduling, this program is split into three proposals This proposal covers 320 orbits (20 weeks) from 1 February 2010 to 20 June 2010
WFC3/IR/S/C 11929
IR Dark Current Monitor
Analyses of ground test data showed that dark current signals are more reliably removed from science data using darks taken with the same exposure sequences as the science data, than with a single dark current image scaled by desired exposure time Therefore, dark current images must be collected using all sample sequences that will be used in science observations These observations will be used to monitor changes in the dark current of the WFC3-IR channel on a day-to-day basis, and to build calibration dark current ramps for each of the sample sequences to be used by Gos in Cycle 17 For each sample sequence/array size combination, a median ramp will be created and delivered to the calibration database system (CDBS)
WFC3/IR 11926
IR Zero Points
We will measure and monitor the zeropoints through the IR filters using observations of the white dwarf standard stars, GD153, GD71 and GD191B2B and the solar analog standard star, P330E Data will be taken monthly during Cycle 17 Observations of the star cluster, NGC 104, are made twice to check color transformations We expect an accuracy of 2% in the wide filter zeropoints relative to the HST photometric system, and 5% in the medium- and narrow-band filters
WFC3/UVIS 11912
UVIS Internal Flats
This proposal will be used to assess the stability of the flat field structure for the UVIS detector throughout the 15 months of Cycle 17 The data will be used to generate on-orbit updates for the delta-flat field reference files used in the WFC3 calibration pipeline, if significant changes in the flat structure are seen
WFC3/UVIS 11908
Cycle 17: UVIS Bowtie Monitor
Ground testing revealed an intermittent hysteresis type effect in the UVIS detector (both CCDs) at the level of ~1%, lasting hours to days Initially found via an unexpected bowtie-shaped feature in flatfield ratios, subsequent lab tests on similar e2v devices have since shown that it is also present as simply an overall offset across the entire CCD, i e , a QE offset without any discernable pattern These lab tests have further revealed that overexposing the detector to count levels several times full well fills the traps and effectively neutralizes the bowtie Each visit in this proposal acquires a set of three 3x3 binned internal flatfields: the first unsaturated image will be used to detect any bowtie, the second, highly exposed image will neutralize the bowtie if it is present, and the final image will allow for verification that the bowtie is gone
WFC3/UVIS 11905
WFC3 UVIS CCD Daily Monitor
The behavior of the WFC3 UVIS CCD will be monitored daily with a set of full-frame, four-amp bias and dark frames A smaller set of 2Kx4K subarray biases are acquired at less frequent intervals throughout the cycle to support subarray science observations The internals from this proposal, along with those from the anneal procedure (Proposal 11909), will be used to generate the necessary superbias and superdark reference files for the calibration pipeline (CDBS)
COS/FUV 11897
FUV Spectroscopic Sensitivity Monitoring
The purpose of this proposal is to monitor sensitivity in each FUV grating mode to detect any changes due to contamination or other causes
WFC3/ACS/UVIS 11877
HST Cycle 17 and Post-SM4 Optical Monitor
This program is the Cycle 17 implementation of the HST Optical Monitoring Program
The 36 orbits comprising this proposal will utilize ACS (Wide Field Channel) and WFC3 (UVIS Channel) to observe stellar cluster members in parallel with multiple exposures over an orbit Phase retrieval performed on the PSF in each image will be used to measure primarily focus, with the ability to explore apparent coma, and astigmatism changes in WFC3
The goals of this program are to: 1) monitor the overall OTA focal length for the purposes of maintaining focus within science tolerances 2) gain experience with the relative effectiveness of phase retrieval on WFC3/UVIS PSFs 3) determine focus offset between the imagers and identify any SI-specific focus behavior and dependencies
If need is determined, future visits will be modified to interleave WFC3/IR channel and STIS/CCD focii measurements
STIS/CC 11847
CCD Bias Monitor-Part 2
Monitor the bias in the 1x1, 1x2, 2x1, and 2x2 bin settings at gain=1, and 1x1 at gain = 4, to build up high-S/N superbiases and track the evolution of hot columns
STIS/CC 11845
CCD Dark Monitor Part 2
Monitor the darks for the STIS CCD
WFC3/UV 11841
The Formation of Brightest Cluster Galaxies
We propose Chandra and HST observations of a unique low redshift cluster in which the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) is in the process of forming The Chandra observations will be used to study the impact of BCG formation on the properties of the intracluster medium We will test whether galaxy merging can destroy cool cores and disrupt hot gas halos We will also explore the role of intracluster stars in enriching the intracluster medium The HST observations will be used to search for extended tidal features and young star clusters and to estimate the final stellar mass of the BCG The low redshift of our target allows a more detailed study of BCG formation than is possible with higher redshift systems
FGS 11789
An Astrometric Calibration of Population II Distance Indicators
In 2002, HST produced a highly precise parallax for RR Lyrae That measurement resulted in an absolute magnitude, M(V)= 0 61+/-0 11, a useful result, judged by the over ten refereed citations each year since It is, however, unsatisfactory to have the direct, parallax-based, distance scale of Population II variables based on a single star We propose, therefore, to obtain the parallaxes of four additional RR Lyrae stars and two Population II Cepheids, or W Vir stars The Population II Cepheids lie with the RR Lyrae stars on a common K-band Period-Luminosity relation Using these parallaxes to inform that relationship, we anticipate a zero point error of 0 04 magnitude This result should greatly strengthen confidence in the Population II distance scale and increase our understanding of RR Lyrae star and Pop II Cepheid astrophysics
FGS 11788
The Architecture of Exoplanetary Systems
Are all planetary systems coplanar? Concordance cosmogony makes that prediction It is, however, a prediction of extrasolar planetary system architecture as yet untested by direct observation for main sequence stars other than the Sun To provide such a test, we propose to carry out FGS astrometric studies on four stars hosting seven companions Our understanding of the planet formation process will grow as we match not only system architecture, but formed planet mass and true distance from the primary with host star characteristics for a wide variety of host stars and exoplanet masses
We propose that a series of FGS astrometric observations with demonstrated 1 millisecond of arc per-observation precision can establish the degree of coplanarity and component true masses for four extrasolar systems: HD 202206 (brown dwarf+planet); HD 128311 (planet+planet), HD 160691 = mu Arae (planet+planet), and HD 222404AB = gamma Cephei (planet+star) In each case the companion is identified as such by assuming that the minimum mass is the actual mass For the last target, a known stellar binary system, the companion orbit is stable only if coplanar with the AB binary orbit
COS/NUV/FUV 11742
Probing HeII Reionization with GALEX-selected Quasar Sightlines and HST/COS
We propose spectroscopic observations with COS of eight z~3 QSOs that we found to be bright in the far ultraviolet Our aim is to study intergalactic absorption caused by the onset of the He II Lyman forest Several lines of evidence suggest that helium reionization occurred at z~3 Understanding this process is critical for a complete picture of the intergalactic medium and its evolution; it also gives clues to hydrogen reionization at z>6 The only direct means of assessing He II reionization is through far-UV observations of the He II Lyman alpha forest Only 6 sightlines are known to date where this is feasible, despite extensive surveys Our program is designed to double the number of available sightlines To this effect, we cross-correlated all known z>2 73 quasars with UV source lists from the GALEX satellite The selected quasars were all significantly detected in the far UV by GALEX, and their UV colors are similar to those of already known quasars with transparent sightlines Spectra obtained with COS will allow us to compile the first comprehensive sample of He II absorption spectra probing similar redshifts, enabling a systematic investigation of the He II reionization epoch and the spectral shape of the UV background
COS/NUV/FUV 11728
The Impact of Starbursts on the Gaseous Halos of Galaxies
Perhaps the most important (yet uncertain) aspects of galaxy evolution are the processes by which galaxies accrete gas and by which the resulting star formation and black hole growth affects this accreting gas It is believed that both the form of the accretion and the nature of the feedback change as a function of the galaxy mass At low mass the gas comes in cold and the feedback is provided by massive stars At high mass, the gas comes in hot, and the feedback is from an AGN The changeover occurs near the mass where the galaxy population transitions from star-forming galaxies to red and dead ones The population of red and dead galaxies is building with cosmic time, and it is believed that feedback plays an important role in this process: shutting down star formation by heating and/or expelling the reservoir of cold halo gas To investigate these ideas, we propose to use COS far-UV spectra of background QSOs to measure the properties of the halo gas in a sample of galaxies near the transition mass that have undergone starbursts within the past 100 Myr to 1 Gyr The galactic wind associated with the starburst is predicted to have affected the properties of the gaseous halo To test this, we will compare the properties of the halos of the post-starburst galaxies to those of a control sample of galaxies matched in mass and QSO impact parameter Do the halos of the post-starburst galaxies show a higher incidence rate of Ly-Alpha and metal absorption-lines? Are the kinematics of the halo gas more disturbed in the post-starbursts? Has the wind affected the ionization state and/or the metallicity of the halo? These data will provide fresh new insights into the role of feedback from massive stars on the evolution of galaxies, and may also offer clues about the properties of the QSO metal absorption-line systems at high-redshift
FGS 11704
The Ages of Globular Clusters and the Population II Distance Scale
Globular clusters are the oldest objects in the universe whose age can be accurately determined The dominant error in globular cluster age determinations is the uncertain Population II distance scale We propose to use FGS 1R to obtain parallaxes with an accuracy of 0 2 milliarcsecond for 9 main sequence stars with [Fe/H] < -1 5 This will determine the absolute magnitude of these stars with accuracies of 0 04 to 0 06mag This data will be used to determine the distance to 24 metal-poor globular clusters using main sequence fitting These distances (with errors of 0 05 mag) will be used to determine the ages of globular clusters using the luminosity of the subgiant branch as an age indicator This will yield absolute ages with an accuracy of 5%, about a factor of two improvement over current estimates Coupled with existing parallaxes for more metal-rich stars, we will be able to accurately determine the age for globular clusters over a wide range of metallicities in order to study the early formation history of the Milky Way and provide an independent estimate of the age of the universe
The Hipparcos database contains only 1 star with [Fe/H] < -1 4 and an absolute magnitude error less than 0 18 mag which is suitable for use in main sequence fitting Previous attempts at main sequence fitting to metal-poor globular clusters have had to rely on theoretical calibrations of the color of the main sequence Our HST parallax program will remove this source of possible systematic error and yield distances to metal-poor globular clusters which are significantly more accurate than possible with the current parallax data The HST parallax data will have errors which are 10 times smaller than the current parallax data Using the HST parallaxes, we will obtain main sequence fitting distances to 11 globular clusters which contain over 500 RR Lyrae stars This will allow us to calibrate the absolute magnitude of RR Lyrae stars, a commonly used Population II distance indicator
WFC3/IR 11696
Infrared Survey of Star Formation Across Cosmic Time
We propose to use the unique power of WFC3 slitless spectroscopy to measure the evolution of cosmic star formation from the end of the reionization epoch at z>6 to the close of the galaxy- building era at z~0 3 Pure parallel observations with the grisms have proven to be efficient for identifying line emission from galaxies across a broad range of redshifts The G102 grism on WFC3 was designed to extend this capability to search for Ly-alpha emission from the first galaxies Using up to 250 orbits of pure parallel WFC3 spectroscopy, we will observe about 40 deep (4-5 orbit) fields with the combination of G102 and G141, and about 20 shallow (2-3 orbit) fields with G141 alone
Our primary science goals at the highest redshifts are: (1) Detect Lya
in ~100 galaxies with z>5
6 and measure the evolution of the Lya
luminosity function, independent of of cosmic variance; 2) Determine
the connection between emission line selected and continuum-break
selected galaxies at these high redshifts, and 3) Search for the
proposed signature of neutral hydrogen absorption at re-ionization
At
intermediate redshifts we will (4) Detect more than 1000 galaxies in
Halpha at 0
5 To identify single-line Lya emitters, we will exploit the wide
0
8--1
9um wavelength coverage of the combined G102+G141 spectra
All
[OII] and [OIII] interlopers detected in G102 will be reliably
separated from true LAEs by the detection of at least one strong line
in the G141 spectrum, without the need for any ancillary data
We
waive all proprietary rights to our data and will make high-level data
products available through the ST/ECF
ACS/WFC3 11670 The Host Environments of Type Ia Supernovae in the SDSS Survey The Sloan Digital Sky Survey Supernova Survey has discovered nearly
500 type Ia supernovae and created a large, unique, and uniform sample
of these cosmological tools
As part of a comprehensive study of the
supernova hosts, we propose to obtain Hubble ACS images of a large
fraction of these galaxies
Integrated colors and spectra will be
measured from the ground, but we require high-resolution HST imaging
to provide accurate morphologies and color information at the site of
the explosion
This information is essential in determining the
systematic effects of population age on type Ia supernova luminosities
and improving their reliability in measuring dark energy
Recent
studies suggest two populations of type Ia supernovae: a class that
explodes promptly after star-formation and one that is delayed by
billions of years
Measuring the star-formation rate at the site of
the supernova from colors in the HST images may be the best way to
differentiate between these classes
WFC3/UVIS/IR 11662 Improving the Radius-Luminosity Relationship for Broad-Lined AGNs with
a New Reverberation Sample The radius-luminosity (R-L) relationship is currently the fundamental
basis for all techniques used to estimate black hole masses in AGNs,
in both the nearby and distant universe
However, the current R-L
relationship is based on 34 objects that cover a limited range in
black hole mass and luminosity
To improve our understanding of black
hole growth and evolution, the R-L relationship must be extended to
cover a broader range of black hole masses using the technique known
as reverberation mapping
To this end, we have been awarded an
unprecedented 64 nights on the Lick Observatory 3-m telescope between
March 24 and May 31, 2008, to spectroscopically monitor 12 AGNs in
order to measure their black hole masses
To properly determine the
luminosities of these 12 AGNs, we must correct them for their
host-galaxy starlight contributions using high-resolution images
Previous work by Bentz et al
(2006) has shown that the starlight
correction to AGN luminosity measurements is an essential component to
interpreting the R-L relationship
The correction will be substantial
for each of the 12 sources we will monitor, as the AGNs are relatively
faint and embedded in nearby, bright galaxies
Starlight corrections
are not possible with ground-based images, as the PSF and bulge
contributions become indistinguishable under typical seeing
conditions, and adaptive optics are not yet operational in the
spectral range where the corrections are needed
In addition, spectral
decompositions are very model-dependent and are limited by the degree
of accuracy to which we understand emission processes and stellar
populations in galaxies
Without correcting for starlight, we will be
unable to apply the results of our Spring 2008 campaign to the body of
knowledge from previous reverberation mapping work
Therefore, we
propose to obtain high resolution, high dynamic range images of the
host galaxies of the 12 AGNs in our ground-based monitoring sample, as
well as one white dwarf which will be used as a PSF model
WFC3/IR 11648 WFC3 Spectroscopy of an X-ray Luminous Galaxy Cluster at z>2 We propose to obtain deep WFC3+G141 grism observations to
spectroscopically confirm a remarkable z>2 cluster of galaxy
candidate
Over a 1000 arcmin^2 field imaged with SpitzerÕs IRAC we
have discovered a compact (<30ÕÕ diameter) concentration of extremely
red galaxies with a factor of >40 overdensity over the adjacent field
Among these galaxies for which we can derive meaningful photometric
redshifts, 17 are consistent with zphot=2-2
5, making it very likely
that the concentration is a real cluster at such high redshift
This
is further supported by a 3
5 sigma detection of extended X-Ray
emission on XMM-Newton data, by a likely color?magnitude sequence of
red galaxies, and by the presence of a giant galaxy consistent with a
BCG at the cluster redshift
The general faintness of the red galaxies
in all optical bands and their high redshifts prevent confirmation of
this cluster with ordinary optical spectroscopy
The WFC3 camera with
G141 grism provides the only way to confirm this record high-z cluster
and measure its redshift from spectral breaks typical of old stellar
populations
Our deep integrations will reveal redshifts for at least
19 ultra-red galaxies in the area and of a similar number of bluer
galaxies at the cluster redshift
Knowledge of the cluster redshift
based on the HST spectra will allow us to reach important scientific
aims: find the most distant X?ray emitting evolved galaxy cluster,
determine membership of the other galaxies from photometric SED
analysis, study their stellar population properties, characterize the
color-magnitude relation with constraints on the formation redshift
The proposed observations will establish a first z>2 benchmark for
cluster?field comparisons of galaxy formation at this highest redshift
and will firmly establish the progenitors of local rich Abell
clusters
WFC3/UVIS/IR 11644 A Dynamical-Compositional Survey of the Kuiper Belt: A New Window Into
the Formation of the Outer Solar System The eight planets overwhelmingly dominate the solar system by mass,
but their small numbers, coupled with their stochastic pasts, make it
impossible to construct a unique formation history from the dynamical
or compositional characteristics of them alone
In contrast, the huge
numbers of small bodies scattered throughout and even beyond the
planets, while insignificant by mass, provide an almost unlimited
number of probes of the statistical conditions, history, and
interactions in the solar system
To date, attempts to understand the
formation and evolution of the Kuiper Belt have largely been dynamical
simulations where a hypothesized starting condition is evolved under
the gravitational influence of the early giant planets and an attempt
is made to reproduce the current observed populations
With little
compositional information known for the real Kuiper Belt, the test
particles in the simulation are free to have any formation location
and history as long as they end at the correct point
Allowing
compositional information to guide and constrain the formation,
thermal, and collisional histories of these objects would add an
entire new dimension to our understanding of the evolution of the
outer solar system
While ground based compositional studies have hit
their flux limits already with only a few objects sampled, we propose
to exploit the new capabilities of WFC3 to perform the first ever
large-scale dynamical-compositional study of Kuiper Belt Objects
(KBOs) and their progeny to study the chemical, dynamical, and
collisional history of the region of the giant planets
The
sensitivity of the WFC3 observations will allow us to go up to two
magnitudes deeper than our ground based studies, allowing us the
capability of optimally selecting a target list for a large survey
rather than simply taking the few objects that can be measured, as we
have had to do to date
We have carefully constructed a sample of 120
objects which provides both overall breadth, for a general
understanding of these objects, plus a large enough number of objects
in the individual dynamical subclass to allow detailed comparison
between and within these groups
These objects will likely define the
core Kuiper Belt compositional sample for years to come
While we have
many specific results anticipated to come from this survey, as with
any project where the field is rich, our current knowledge level is
low, and a new instrument suddenly appears which can exploit vastly
larger segments of the population, the potential for discovery -- both
anticipated and not -- is extraordinary
WFC3/UV 11605 Obtaining the Missing Links in the Test of Very Low Mass Evolutionary
Models with HST We are proposing for spatially resolved ACS+HRC observations of 11
very low mass binaries spanning late-M, L and T spectral types in
order to obtain precise effective temperature measurements for each
component
All of our targets are part of a program in which we are
measuring dynamical masses of very low-mass binaries to an
unprecedented precision of 10% (or better)
However, without precise
temperature measurements, the full scientific value of these mass
measurements cannot be realized
Together, mass and temperature
measurements will allow us to distinguish between brown dwarf
evolutionary models that make different assumptions about the interior
and atmospheric structure of these ultra-cool objects
While dynamical
masses can be obtained from the ground in the near-IR, obtaining
precise temperatures require access to optical data which, for these
sub-arcsecond binaries, can only be obtained from space with Hubble
WFC3/UVIS 11595 Turning Out the Light: A WFC3 Program to Image z>2 Damped Lyman Alpha
Systems We propose to directly image the star-forming regions of z>2 damped
Lya systems (DLAs) using the WFC3/UVIS camera on the Hubble Space
Telescope
In contrast to all previous attempts to detect the galaxies
giving rise to high redshift DLAs, we will use a novel technique that
completely removes the glare of the background quasar
Specifically,
we will target quasar sightlines with multiple DLAs and use the higher
redshift DLA as a ``blocking filter'' (via Lyman limit absorption) to
eliminate all FUV emission from the quasar
This will allow us to
carry out a deep search for FUV emission from the lower redshift DLA,
shortward of the Lyman limit of the higher redshift absorber
The
unique filter set and high spatial resolution afforded by WFC3/UVIS
will then enable us to directly image the lower redshift DLA and thus
estimate its size, star- formation rate and impact parameter from the
QSO sightline
We propose to observe a sample of 20 sightlines,
selected primarily from the SDSS database, requiring a total of 40 HST
orbits
The observations will allow us to determine the first FUV
luminosity function of high redshift DLA galaxies and to correlate the
DLA galaxy properties with the ISM characteristics inferred from
standard absorption-line analysis to significantly improve our
understanding of the general DLA population
WFC3/UV/IR 11573 Investigating Post-Equinox Atmospheric Changes on Uranus Uranus is now past its 7 December 2007 equinox
The large seasonal
phase shift expected from its long radiative time constant implies
that it should now be in the process of reversing its hemispheric
asymmetries in cloud band structure and zonal circulation
Many
changes already observed -- the development of the first
visible-wavelength dark spot, discovered in Cycle 15, the fading of
the south polar cap, and the development of a new northern bright band
while the southern band fades -- may all be indicative of the expected
reversal
We propose a detailed characterization of Uranus' current
seasonal response with a 9-orbit program consisting of 3 orbits of
WFC3 imaging of cloud bands and dark spots, and 6 orbits of high
signal-to-noise imaging using the F845M filter, capable of tracking
bright discrete cloud features
Filters between 0
467 and 1
7 microns
will provide vertical sensing depths scanning through the pressure
range where the putative methane and deeper H2S clouds might plausibly
exist and provide strong constraints on their contributions and parent
gas mixing ratios
These observations have unique combinations of
spectral range and resolution with needed temporal sampling and
spatial resolution not available from groundbased observations
WFC3/ACS/UVIS/IR 11570 Narrowing in on the Hubble Constant and Dark Energy A measurement of the Hubble constant to a precision of a few percent
would be a powerful aid to the investigation of the nature of dark
energy and a potent "end-to end" test of the present cosmological
model
In Cycle 15 we constructed a new streamlined distance ladder
utilizing high- quality type Ia supernova data and observations of
Cepheids with HST in the near-IR to minimize the dominant sources of
systematic uncertainty in past measurements of the Hubble constant and
reduce its total uncertainty to a little under 5%
Here we propose to
exploit this new route to reduce the remaining uncertainty by more
than 30%, translating into an equal reduction in the uncertainty of
the equation of state of dark energy
We propose three sets of
observations to reach this goal: a mosaic of NGC 4258 with WFC3 in
F160W to triple its sample of long period Cepheids, WFC3/F160W
observations of the 6 ideal SN Ia hosts to triple their samples of
Cepheids, and observations of NGC 5584 the host of a new SN Ia, SN
2007af, to discover and measure its Cepheids and begin expanding the
small set of SN Ia luminosity calibrations
These observations would
provide the bulk of a coordinated program aimed at making the
measurement of the Hubble constant one of the leading constraints on
dark energy
WFC3/UV/COS/FUV 11536 COS-GTO: Sleuthing the Source of Distant Cometary Activity Distant comets and Centaurs often show cometary activity and outbursts
well beyond 3 AU, the boundary of the sublimation zone of water
Super-volatiles (most likely CO, but possibly CH4, N2, or S2) are
suspected to be responsible, but have never been detected in distant
comets in the UV
We will obtain FUV spectra of active bodies to cover
important CO emission bands
We plan two sets of observations: comet
29P/Schwassmann-Wachmann at 6 AU, whose outbursts are too short to
capture as a Target of Opportunity, but which also shows persistent
cometary activity in quiescence; and Target of Opportunity
observations of the Centaur 2060 Chiron (at ~15
5 AU) in outburst
ACS/WFC 11338 Continued M31 Monitoring for Black Hole X-ray Nova During A01-7 we found >16 Black Hole X-ray Novae (BHXN) in M31 using
Chandra, and with HST followup have estimated orbital periods for 6 of
these
Observations are underway with HST to attempt to estimate
additional periods
We propose to continue this program, concentrating
our scarce HST resources on a single transient which exceeds the NS
Eddington limit
Only uninterrupted monitoring can yield the duty
cycles and long-term lightcurves of BHXN (and other variables) in M31
Our GO+GTO programs have accumulated 300ks (ACIS) near the M31 bulge,
and total ACIS exposure on M31 is now 620ks
Our monitoring program
alone can amass 500ks on the bulge if continued through AO12, and
combined with other programs will reach >1Msec ACIS exposure on the
bulge
==============================================================================
TOPIC: Daily Report #5112 == 1 of 1 ==
Date: Tues, Jun 8 2010 9:23 am
From: "Cooper, Joe" HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science DAILY REPORT #5112 PERIOD COVERED: 5am June 7 - 5am June 8, 2010 (DOY 158/09:00z-159/09:00z) FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary
reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be
investigated
) HSTARS: 12297 - REAcq(1,2,1) at 159/07:28:29z failed, FGS Sequential Attitude
update failed at 159/07:31z
Initial GSACQ(1,2,1) at 159/06:02:27z was
successful
Observations affected: WFC3 49 - 52, proposal ID#11926
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None) COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None) FGS GSAcq 13 13
FGS REAcq 4 3
OBAD with Maneuver 8 8 SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None) OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED: ACS/WFC 11995 CCD Daily Monitor (Part 2) This program comprises basic tests for measuring the read noise and
dark current of the ACS WFC and for tracking the growth of hot pixels
The recorded frames are used to create bias and dark reference images
for science data reduction and calibration
This program will be
executed four days per week (Mon, Wed, Fri, Sun) for the duration of
Cycle 17
To facilitate scheduling, this program is split into three
proposals
This proposal covers 320 orbits (20 weeks) from 1 February
2010 to 20 June 2010
ACS/WFC3 11735 The LSD Project: Dynamics, Merging and Stellar Populations of a Sample
of Well-Studied LBGs at z~3 A large observational effort with the ground-based ESO/VLT telescopes
allowed us to obtain deep, spatially-resolved, near-IR spectra of
complete sample of 11 Lyman-Break Galaxies at z~3
1
These
observations were used to obtain, for the first time, the metallicity
and the dynamical properties of a sample of objects that, albeit
small, is representative of the total population of the LBGs
We
propose to use HST to obtain high-resolution optical and near-IR
images of this sample of LBGs in order to study the broad-band
morphology and the stellar light distribution of these galaxies
These
images, exploiting the superior spatial resolution of HST images and
the low-background : 1- will allow a precise measure of the dynamical
mass from the velocity field derived with spectroscopy; 2- will permit
a comparison of the distribution of star formation (from the line
emission) with the underlying stellar population, and, 3- will be used
to check if the complex velocity field and the multiple line-emitting
regions detected in most targets can be ascribed to on-going mergers
This accurate study will shed light on a number of unsolved problems
still affecting the knowledge of the LBGs
COS/FUV 11687 SNAPing Coronal Iron This is a Snapshot Survey to explore two forbidden lines of highly
ionized iron in late-type coronal sources
Fe XII 1349 (T~ 2 MK) and
Fe XXI 1354 (T~ 10 MK) -- well known to Solar Physics -- have been
detected in about a dozen cool stars, mainly with HST/STIS
The UV
coronal forbidden lines are important because they can be observed
with velocity resolution of better than 15 km/s, whereas even the
state-of-the-art X-ray spectrometers on Chandra can manage only 300
km/s in the kilovolt band where lines of highly ionized iron more
commonly are found
The kinematic properties of hot coronal plasmas,
which are of great interest to theorists and modelers, thus only are
accessible in the UV at present
The bad news is that the UV coronal
forbidden lines are faint, and were captured only in very deep
observations with STIS
The good news is that 3rd-generation Cosmic
Origins Spectrograph, slated for installation in HST by SM4, in a mere
25 minute exposure with its G130M mode can duplicate the sensitivity
of a landmark 25-orbit STIS E140M observation of AD Leo, easily the
deepest such exposure of a late-type star so far
Our goal is to build
up understanding of the properties of Fe XII and Fe XXI in additional
objects beyond the current limited sample: how the lineshapes depend
on activity, whether large scale velocity shifts can be detected, and
whether the dynamical content of the lines can be inverted to map the
spatial morphology of the stellar corona (as in "Doppler Imaging'')
In other words, we want to bring to bear in the coronal venue all the
powerful tricks of spectroscopic remote sensing, well in advance of
the time that this will be possible exploiting the corona's native
X-ray radiation
The 1290-1430 band captured by side A of G130M also
contains a wide range of key plasma diagnostics that form at
temperatures from below 10, 000 K (neutral lines of CNO), to above
200, 000 K (semi-permitted O V 1371), including the important bright
multiplets of C II at 1335 and Si IV at 1400; yielding a diagnostic
gold mine for the subcoronal atmosphere
Because of the broad value of
the SNAP spectra, beyond the coronal iron project, we waive the normal
proprietary rights
COS/FUV 11895 FUV Detector Dark Monitor Monitor the FUV detector dark rate by taking long science exposures
without illuminating the detector
The detector dark rate and spatial
distribution of counts will be compared to pre-launch and SMOV data in
order to verify the nominal operation of the detector
Variations of
count rate as a function of orbital position will be analyzed to find
dependence of dark rate on proximity to the SAA
Dependence of dark
rate as function of time will also be tracked
COS/FUV/STIS/CCD/MA1 11592 Testing the Origin(s) of the Highly Ionized High-Velocity Clouds: A
Survey of Galactic Halo Stars at z>3 kpc Cosmological simulation predicts that highly ionized gas plays an
important role in the formation and evolution of galaxies and their
interplay with the intergalactic medium
The NASA HST and FUSE
missions have revealed high-velocity CIV and OVI absorption along
extragalactic sightlines through the Galactic halo
These highly
ionized high-velocity clouds (HVCs) could cover 85% of the sky and
have a detection rate higher than the HI HVCs
Two competing, equally
exciting, theories may explain the origin of these highly ionized
HVCs: 1) the "Galactic" theory, where the HVCs are the result of
feedback processes and trace the disk-halo mass exchange, perhaps
including the accretion of matter condensing from an extended corona;
2) the "Local Group" theory, where they are part of the local warm-hot
intergalactic medium, representing some of the missing baryonic matter
of the Universe
Only direct distance determinations can discriminate
between these models
Our group has found that some of these highly
ionized HVCs have a Galactic origin, based on STIS observations of one
star at z<5
3 kpc
We propose an HST FUV spectral survey to search for
and characterize the high velocity NV, CIV, and SiIV interstellar
absorption toward 24 stars at much larger distances than any previous
searches (4 COS/NUV 11894 NUV Detector Dark Monitor The purpose of this proposal is to measure the NUV detector dark rate
by taking long science exposures with no light on the detector
The
detector dark rate and spatial distribution of counts will be compared
to pre-launch and SMOV data in order to verify the nominal operation
of the detector
Variations of count rate as a function of orbital
position will be analyzed to find dependence of dark rate on proximity
to the SAA
Dependence of dark rate as function of time will also be
tracked
COS/NUV/FUV 11598 How Galaxies Acquire their Gas: A Map of Multiphase Accretion and
Feedback in Gaseous Galaxy Halos We propose to address two of the biggest open questions in galaxy
formation - how galaxies acquire their gas and how they return it to
the IGM - with a concentrated COS survey of diffuse multiphase gas in
the halos of SDSS galaxies at z = 0
15 - 0
35
Our chief science goal
is to establish a basic set of observational facts about the physical
state, metallicity, and kinematics of halo gas, including the sky
covering fraction of hot and cold material, the metallicity of infall
and outflow, and correlations with galaxy stellar mass, type, and
color - all as a function of impact parameter from 10 - 150 kpc
Theory suggests that the bimodality of galaxy colors, the shape of the
luminosity function, and the mass-metallicity relation are all
influenced at a fundamental level by accretion and feedback, yet these
gas processes are poorly understood and cannot be predicted robustly
from first principles
We lack even a basic observational assessment
of the multiphase gaseous content of galaxy halos on 100 kpc scales,
and we do not know how these processes vary with galaxy properties
This ignorance is presently one of the key impediments to
understanding galaxy formation in general
We propose to use the
high-resolution gratings G130M and G160M on the Cosmic Origins
Spectrograph to obtain sensitive column density measurements of a
comprehensive suite of multiphase ions in the spectra of 43 z < 1 QSOs
lying behind 43 galaxies selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
In aggregate, these sightlines will constitute a statistically sound
map of the physical state and metallicity of gaseous halos, and
subsets of the data with cuts on galaxy mass, color, and SFR will seek
out predicted variations of gas properties with galaxy properties
Our
interpretation of these data will be aided by state-of-the-art
hydrodynamic simulations of accretion and feedback, in turn providing
information to refine and test such models
We will also use Keck,
MMT, and Magellan (as needed) to obtain optical spectra of the QSOs to
measure cold gas with Mg II, and optical spectra of the galaxies to
measure SFRs and to look for outflows
In addition to our other
science goals, these observations will help place the Milky Way's
population of multiphase, accreting High Velocity Clouds (HVCs) into a
global context by identifying analogous structures around other
galaxies
Our program is designed to make optimal use of the unique
capabilities of COS to address our science goals and also generate a
rich dataset of other absorption-line systems STIS/CC 11845 CCD Dark Monitor Part 2 Monitor the darks for the STIS CCD
STIS/CC 11847 CCD Bias Monitor-Part 2 Monitor the bias in the 1x1, 1x2, 2x1, and 2x2 bin settings at gain=1,
and 1x1 at gain = 4, to build up high-S/N superbiases and track the
evolution of hot columns
STIS/CCD 11721 Verifying the Utility of Type Ia Supernovae as Cosmological Probes:
Evolution and Dispersion in the Ultraviolet Spectra The study of distant type Ia supernova (SNe Ia) offers the most
practical and immediate discriminator between popular models of dark
energy
Yet fundamental questions remain over possible
redshift-dependent trends in their observed and intrinsic properties
High-quality Keck spectroscopy of a representative sample of 36
intermediate redshift SNe Ia has revealed a surprising, and
unexplained, diversity in their rest-frame UV fluxes
One possible
explanation is hitherto undiscovered variations in the progenitor
metallicity
Unfortunately, this result cannot be compared to local UV
data as only two representative SNe Ia have been studied near maximum
light
Taking advantage of two new `rolling searches' and the
restoration of STIS, we propose a non-disruptive TOO campaign to
create an equivalent comparison local sample
This will allow us to
address possible evolution in the mean UV spectrum and its diversity,
an essential precursor to the study of SNe beyond z~1
WFC3/ACS/UVIS 11603 A Comprehensive Study of Dust Formation in Type II Supernovae with
HST, Spitzer, and Gemini The recent discovery of three extremely bright Type II SNe, (2007it,
2007oc, 2007od) gives us a unique opportunity to combine observations
with HST, Spitzer, and Gemini to study the little understood dust
formation process in Type II Sne
Priority 1 Spitzer Cycle 5 and band
1 Gemini 2008A time has already been approved for this project
Since
late-time Type II Sne are faint and tend to be in crowded fields, we
need the high sensitivity and high spatial resolution of ACS and
NICMOS/NIC2 for these observations
This project is motivated by the
recent detection of large amounts of dust in high redshift galaxies
The dust in these high-z galaxies must come from young, massive stars
so Type II Sne could be potential sources
The mechanism and the
efficiency of dust condensation in Type II SN ejecta are not well
understood, largely due to the lack of observational data
We plan to
produce a unique dataset, combining spectroscopy and imaging in the
visible, near- and mid-IR covering the key phase, 400-700 days after
maximum when dust is known to form in the SN ejecta
Therefore, we are
proposing for coordinated HST/NOAO observations (HST ACS, NICMOS/NIC2
& Gemini/GMOS and TReCS) which will be combined with our Spitzer Cycle
5 data to study these new bright Sne
The results of this program will
place strong constraints on the formation of dust seen in young high
redshift (z>5) galaxies
WFC3/IR 11666 Chilly Pairs: A Search for the Latest-type Brown Dwarf Binaries and
the Prototype Y Dwarf We propose to use HST/NICMOS to image a sample of 27 of the nearest (<
20 pc) and lowest luminosity T-type brown dwarfs in order to identify
and characterize new very low mass binary systems
Only 3 late-type T
dwarf binaries have been found to date, despite that fact that these
systems are critical benchmarks for evolutionary and atmospheric
models at the lowest masses
They are also the most likely systems to
harbor Y dwarf companions, an as yet unpopulated putative class of
very cold (T < 600 K) brown dwarfs
Our proposed program will more
than double the number of T5-T9 dwarfs imaged at high resolution, with
an anticipated yield of ~5 new binaries with initial characterization
of component spectral types
We will be able to probe separations
sufficient to identify systems suitable for astrometric orbit and
dynamical mass measurements
We also expect one of our discoveries to
contain the first Y-type brown dwarf
Our proposed program complements
and augments ongoing ground-based adaptive optics surveys and provides
pathway science for JWST
WFC3/IR/S/C 11929 IR Dark Current Monitor Analyses of ground test data showed that dark current signals are more
reliably removed from science data using darks taken with the same
exposure sequences as the science data, than with a single dark
current image scaled by desired exposure time
Therefore, dark current
images must be collected using all sample sequences that will be used
in science observations
These observations will be used to monitor
changes in the dark current of the WFC3-IR channel on a day-to-day
basis, and to build calibration dark current ramps for each of the
sample sequences to be used by Gos in Cycle 17
For each sample
sequence/array size combination, a median ramp will be created and
delivered to the calibration database system (CDBS)
WFC3/IR 11926 IR Zero Points We will measure and monitor the zeropoints through the IR filters
using observations of the white dwarf standard stars, GD153, GD71 and
GD191B2B and the solar analog standard star, P330E
Data will be taken
monthly during Cycle 17
Observations of the star cluster, NGC 104,
are made twice to check color transformations
We expect an accuracy
of 2% in the wide filter zeropoints relative to the HST photometric
system, and 5% in the medium- and narrow-band filters
WFC3/UV 12119 Rapid Response: Unexpected Jupiter Impact On 3 June 2010, amateur astronomers A
Wesley and C
Go independently
captured observations of an impact on Jupiter: the bright flash of an
impact itself, not the dark aftermath as seen in 2009
This event was
completely unexpected given the recent impact in 2009, and contradicts
recently revised predictions of jovian impact rates
Three
circumstances make this 2009 event unique: first, the event was
captured on video; second, it was on the jovian day-side and hence
fully visible from Earth; and third, it was at low latitude (i
e
,
favorably placed on the planet)
These factors will permit a
lightcurve to be extracted, which is critical for determining the
energy of the explosion and hence the size of the impacting body (not
available for the 2009 event and available for only a few 1994 events
by Galileo)
As of this writing, no dark impact site has been detected
with telescopes of any aperture, including the Gemini North telescope
Hubble may be the only facility with high enough spatial resolution to
detect the 2010 impact site
If Hubble images show a site, then the
body's trajectory might be obtainable
If no site is detected, then
Hubble will confirm that this is the first observation of a meteor on
another atmosphere-bearing planet
If an event of this size occurred
on Earth, it would be likely be termed a Type 1 Low-Altitude Airburst,
like Tunguska or larger
Thus, this new event could become the
best-observed analogue of a terrestrial airburst of the size that
dominates the impact threat to humans
The observations we propose
should provide independent constraints on penetration depth and
atmospheric effects
This data will strongly inform our understanding
of terrestrial airbursts and allow better quantification of the
associated threat
We request a single orbit to image the impact
latitude on the planet's central meridian
Of critical importance are
Hubble's unique UV sensitivity (critical for assessing aspects of the
2009 impact, and not obtainable from any ground-based facility) and
Hubble's high spatial resolution (also not obtainable in the visible
form any ground-based telescope)
WFC3/UVIS 11707 Detecting Isolated Black Holes through Astrometric Microlensing This proposal aims to make the first detection of isolated
stellar-mass black holes (BHs) in the Milky Way, and to determine
their masses
Until now, the only directly measured BH masses have
come from radial-velocity measurements of X-ray binaries
Our proposed
method uses the astrometric shifts that occur when a galactic-bulge
microlensing event is caused by a BH lens
Out of the hundreds of
bulge microlensing events found annually by the OGLE and MOA surveys,
a few are found to have very long durations (>200 days)
It is
generally believed that the majority of these long-duration events are
caused by lenses that are isolated BHs
To test this hypothesis, we will carry out high-precision astrometry
of 5 long-duration events, using the ACS/HRC camera
The expected
astrometric signal from a BH lens is >1
4 mas, at least 7 times the
demonstrated astrometric precision attainable with the HRC
This proposal will thus potentially lead to the first unambiguous
detection of isolated stellar-mass BHs, and the first direct mass
measurement for isolated stellar-mass BHs through any technique
Detection of several BHs will provide information on the frequency of
BHs in the galaxy, with implications for the slope of the IMF at high
masses, the minimum mass of progenitors that produce BHs, and
constraints on theoretical models of BH formation
WFC3/UVIS 11732 The Temperature Profiles of Quasar Accretion Disks We can now routinely measure the size of quasar accretion disks using
gravitational microlensing of lensed quasars
At optical wavelengths
we observe a size and scaling with black hole mass roughly consistent
with thin disk theory but the sizes are larger than expected from the
observed optical fluxes
One solution would be to use a flatter
temperature profile, which we can study by measuring the wavelength
dependence of the disk size over the largest possible wavelength
baseline
Thus, to understand the size discrepancy and to probe closer
to the inner edge of the disk we need to extend our measurements to UV
wavelengths, and this can only be done with HST
For example, in the
UV we should see significant changes in the optical/UV size ratio with
black hole mass
We propose monitoring 5 lenses spanning a broad range
of black hole masses with well-sampled ground based light curves,
optical disk size measurements and known GALEX UV fluxes during Cycles
17 and 18 to expand from our current sample of two lenses
We would
obtain 5 observations of each target in each Cycle, similar to our
successful strategy for the first two targets
WFC3/UVIS 11905 WFC3 UVIS CCD Daily Monitor The behavior of the WFC3 UVIS CCD will be monitored daily with a set
of full-frame, four-amp bias and dark frames
A smaller set of 2Kx4K
subarray biases are acquired at less frequent intervals throughout the
cycle to support subarray science observations
The internals from
this proposal, along with those from the anneal procedure (Proposal
11909), will be used to generate the necessary superbias and superdark
reference files for the calibration pipeline (CDBS)
WFC3/UVIS 11908 Cycle 17: UVIS Bowtie Monitor Ground testing revealed an intermittent hysteresis type effect in the
UVIS detector (both CCDs) at the level of ~1%, lasting hours to days
Initially found via an unexpected bowtie-shaped feature in flatfield
ratios, subsequent lab tests on similar e2v devices have since shown
that it is also present as simply an overall offset across the entire
CCD, i
e
, a QE offset without any discernable pattern
These lab
tests have further revealed that overexposing the detector to count
levels several times full well fills the traps and effectively
neutralizes the bowtie
Each visit in this proposal acquires a set of
three 3x3 binned internal flatfields: the first unsaturated image will
be used to detect any bowtie, the second, highly exposed image will
neutralize the bowtie if it is present, and the final image will allow
for verification that the bowtie is gone
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