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============================================================================== TOPIC: Daily Report #5196
== 1 of 1 == Date: Wed, Oct 6 2010 7:43 am From: "Cooper, Joe"
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT #5196
PERIOD COVERED: 8:00pm October 4 - 7:59pm October 5, 2010 (DOY 278/00:00z-278/23:59z)
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated )
HSTARS:
12452 - GSAcq(1,2,1) at 278/14:55:23z Resulted in Fine Lock Back-up on FGS1
Observations possibly affected: WFC3 1 Proposal ID#12344; WFC3 2-3 Proposal ID#12345; STIS 1 Proposal ID#12212
HSTARS FOR DOY 263, 265, 266, AND 267
12453 - REAcq(2,1,1) at 263/18:48z required two attempts to achieve CT-DV
Observations possibly affected: COS 23-28 Proposal ID#11997; COS 29 Proposal ID#11894
12454 - REAcq(1,2,1) at 265/13:58z required two attempts for FL-DV on FGS2
Observations possibly affected: COS 64-66 Proposal ID#11598
12455 - REAcq(2,1,1) at 266/15:18z required two attempts to achieve CT-DV
Observations possibly affected: WFC3 86-91 Proposal ID#12256
12456 - REAcq(1,2,1) at 267/21:54z required multiple attempts for CT-DV on FGS1
Observations possibly affected: WFC3 116-117 Proposal ID#11591
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
Scheduled Successful
FGS GSAcq 10 10 FGS REAcq 06 06 OBAD with Maneuver 08 08
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED:
ACS/WFC 12210
SLACS for the Masses: Extending Strong Lensing to Lower Masses and Smaller Radii
Strong gravitational lensing provides the most accurate possible measurement of mass in the central regions of early-type galaxies (ETGs) We propose to continue the highly productive Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) Survey for strong gravitational lens galaxies by observing a substantial fraction of 135 new ETG gravitational-lens candidates with HST-ACS WFC F814W Snapshot imaging The proposed target sample has been selected from the seventh and final data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, and is designed to complement the distribution of previously confirmed SLACS lenses in lens-galaxy mass and in the ratio of Einstein radius to optical half-light radius The observations we propose will lead to a combined SLACS sample covering nearly two decades in mass, with dense mapping of enclosed mass as a function of radius out to the half-light radius and beyond With this longer mass baseline, we will extend our lensing and dynamical analysis of the mass structure and scaling relations of ETGs to galaxies of significantly lower mass, and directly test for a transition in structural and dark-matter content trends at intermediate galaxy mass The broader mass coverage will also enable us to make a direct connection to the structure of well-studied nearby ETGs as deduced from dynamical modeling of their line-of-sight velocity distribution fields Finally, the combined sample will allow a more conclusive test of the current SLACS result that the intrinsic scatter in ETG mass-density structure is not significantly correlated with any other galaxy observables The final SLACS sample at the conclusion of this program will comprise approximately 130 lenses with known foreground and background redshifts, and is likely to be the largest confirmed sample of strong-lens galaxies for many years to come
COS/FUV 12212
What are the Locations and Kinematics of Mass Outflows in AGN?
Mass outflows of ionized gas in AGN, first revealed through blueshifted UV and X-ray absorption lines, are likely important feedback mechanisms for the enrichment of the IGM, self-regulation of black-hole growth, and formation of structure in the early Universe To understand the origin, dynamics, and impact of the outflowing absorbers on their surroundings, we need to know their locations (radial positions and polar angles with respect to the AGN rotation axes) and kinematics (radial and transverse velocities) We will use COS high-resolution spectra of 11 Seyfert 1 galaxies to derive velocity-dependent covering factors, ionic column densities, number densities (via metastable lines or variability), and ionization parameters (via photoionization models) of the UV absorbers, and thereby determine their radial locations as we have done for NGC 4151 We will use absorption variability over time scales of up to ~20 years, to determine transverse velocities and detect changes in radial velocities We will use STIS G430M long-slit spectra and WFC3 [OIII] images to resolve the kinematics of the narrow-line region (NLR) and determine the inclinations of the AGN, to investigate the connection between nuclear absorption and NLR emission outflows and their dependence on polar angle
COS/NUV/FUV/WFC3/UV 12248
How Dwarf Galaxies Got That Way: Mapping Multiphase Gaseous Halos and Galactic Winds Below L*
One of the most vexing problems in galaxy formation concerns how gas accretion and feedback influence the evolution of galaxies In high mass galaxies, numerical simulations predict the initial fuel is accreted through 'cold' streams, after which AGN suppress star formation to leave galaxies red and gas-poor In the shallow potential wells that host dwarf galaxies, gas accretion can be very efficient, and "superwinds" driven either by hot gas expelled by SNe or momentum imparted by SNe and hot-star radiation are regarded as the likely source(s) of feedback However, major doubts persist about the physics of gas accretion, and particularly about SN-driven feedback, including their scalings with halo mass and their influence on the evolution of the galaxies While "superwinds" are visible in X-rays near the point of their departure, they generally drop below detectable surface-brightness limits at ~ 10 kpc Cold clumps in winds can be detected as blue-shifted absorption against the galaxy's own starlight, but the radial extent of these winds are difficult to constrain, leaving their energy, momentum, and ultimate fate uncertain Wind prescriptions in hydrodynamical simulations are uncertain and at present are constrained only by indirect observations, e g by their influence on the stellar masses of galaxies and IGM metallicity All these doubts lead to one conclusion: we do not understand gas accretion and feedback because we generally do not observe the infall and winds directly, in the extended gaseous halos of galaxies, when it is happening To do this effectively, we must harness the power of absorption-line spectroscopy to measure the density, temperature, metallicity, and kinematics of small quantities of diffuse gas in galaxy halos The most important physical diagnostics lie in the FUV, so this is uniquely a problem for HST and COS We propose new COS G130M and G160M observations of 41 QSOs that probe the gaseous halos of 44 SDSS dwarf galaxies well inside their virial radii Using sensitive absorption-line measurements of the multiphase gas diagnostics Lya, CII/IV, Si II/III/IV, and other species, supplemented by optical data from SDSS and Keck, we will map the halos of galaxies with L = 0 02 - 0 3 L*, stellar masses M* = 10^(8-10) Msun, over impact parameter from 15 - 150 kpc These observations will directly constrain the content and kinematics of accreting and outflowing material, provide a concrete target for simulations to hit, and statistically test proposed galactic superwind models These observations will also inform the study of galaxies at high z, where the shallow halo potentials that host dwarf galaxies today were the norm These observations are low-risk and routine for COS, easily schedulable, and promise a major advance in our understanding of how dwarf galaxies came to be
WFC3/IR 12286
Hubble Infrared Pure Parallel Imaging Extragalactic Survey (HIPPIES)
WFC3 has demonstrated its unprecedented power in probing the early universe Here we propose to continue our pure parallel program with this instrument to search for LBGs at z~6--8 Our program, dubbed as the Hubble Infrared Pure Parallel Imaging Extragalactic Survey ("HIPPIES"), will carry on the HST pure parallel legacy in the new decade We request 205 orbits in Cycle-18, which will spread over ~ 50 high Galactic latitude visits (|b|>20deg) that last for 3 orbits and longer, resulting a total survey area of ~230 square arcmin Combining the WFC3 pure parallel observations in Cycle-17, HIPPIES will complement other existing and forthcoming WFC3 surveys, and will make unique contributions to the study in the new redshift frontier because of the randomness of the survey fields To make full use of the parallel opportunities, HIPPIES will also take ACS parallels to study LBGs at z~5--6 Being a pure parallel program, HIPPIES will only make very limited demand on the scarce HST resources, but will have potentially large scientific returns As in previous cycle, we waive all proprietary data rights, and will make the enhanced data products public in a timely manner
(1) The WFC3 part of HIPPIES aims at the most luminous LBG population at z~8 and z~7 As its survey fields are random and completely uncorrelated, the number counts of the bright LBGs from HIPPIES will be least affected by the "cosmic variance", and hence we will be able to obtain the best constraint on the bright-end of the LBG luminosity function at z~8 and 7 Comparing the result from HIPPIES to the hydrodynamic simulations will test the input physics and provide insight into the nature of the early galaxies (2) The z~7--8 candidates from HIPPIES, most of which will be the brightest ones that any surveys would be able to find, will have the best chance to be spectroscopically confirmed at the current 8--10m telescopes (3) The ACS part of HIPPIES will produce a significant number of candidate LBGs at z~5 and z~6 per ACS field Combining with the existing, suitable ACS fields in the HST archive, we will be able to utilize the random nature of the survey to quantify the cosmic variance and to measure the galaxy bias at z~5--6, and therefore the galaxy halo masses at these redshifts (4) We will also find a large number of extremely red, old galaxies at intermediate redshifts, and the fine spatial resolution offered by the WFC3 will enable us constrain their formation history based on the study of their morphology, and hence shed light on their connection to the very early galaxies in the universe
WFC3/UV 12215
Searching for the Missing Low-Mass Companions of Massive Stars
Recent results on binary companions of massive O stars appear to indicate that the distribution of secondary masses is truncated at low masses It thus mimics the distribution of companions of G dwarfs and also the Initial Mass Function (IMF), except that it is shifted upward by a factor of 20 in mass These results, if correct, provide a distribution of mass ratios that hints at a strong constraint on the star-formation process However, this intriguing result is derived from a complex simulation of data which suffer from observational incompleteness at the low-mass end
We propose a snapshot survey to test this result in a very direct way HST WFC3 images of a sample of the nearest Cepheids (which were formerly B stars of ~5 Msun) will search for low-mass companions down to M dwarfs We will confirm any companions as young stars, and thus true physical companions, through follow-up Chandra X-ray images Our survey will show clearly whether the companion mass distribution is truncated at low masses, but at a mass much higher than that of the IMF or G dwarfs
WFC3/UV 12344
Cycle 18: 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/UV 12345
UVIS Long Darks Test
Darks during SMOV showed a systematically lower global dark rate as well as lower scatter when compared to the Cycle 17 darks Those two sets of exposures differ in exposure time - 1800 sec during SMOV and 900 sec during Cycle 17 Hypothetically, the effect could be caused by short-duration stray light, say ~500-sec in duration During the latter part of Cycle 17, operation of WFC3 was changed to additionally block the light path to the detector with the CSM This program acquires a small number of darks at the longer SMOV exposure times (1800 sec) in order to check whether the effect repeats in the new operating mode
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 #5197
== 1 of 1 == Date: Thurs, Oct 7 2010 7:09 am From: "Cooper, Joe"
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT #5197
PERIOD COVERED: 8:00pm October 5 - 7:59pm October 6, 2010 (DOY 279/00:00z-279/23:59z)
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated )
HSTARS:
12457 - GSAcq(2,3,3) at 279/15:10:26z resulted in fine lock back-up on FGS2
Observations possibly affected WFC3 39-40, Proposal ID#11905
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
Scheduled Successful
FGS GSAcq 7 7 FGS REAcq 8 8 OBAD with Maneuver 4 4
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED:
ACS/WFC 11996
CCD Daily Monitor (Part 3)
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 308 orbits (19 25 weeks) from 21 June 2010 to 1 November 2010
ACS/WFC3 11734
The Hosts of High Redshift Gamma-Ray Bursts
Gamma-ray bursts are the most luminous explosive events known, acting as beacons to the high redshift universe Long duration GRBs have their origin in the collapse of massive stars and thus select star forming galaxies across a wide range of redshift Due to their bright afterglows we can study the details of GRB host galaxies via absorption spectroscopy, providing redshifts, column densities and metallicities for galaxies far too faint to be accessible directly with current technology We have already obtained deep ground based observations for many hosts and here propose ACS/WFC3 and WFC3 observations of the fields of bursts at z>3 which are undetected in deep ground based images These observations will study the hosts in emission, providing luminosities and morphologies and will enable the construction of a sample of high-z galaxies with more detailed physical properties than has ever been possible before
COS/NUV/FUV 12178
Spanning the Reionization History of IGM Helium: a Highly Efficient Spectral Survey of the Far-UV-Brightest Quasars
The reionization of IGM helium likely occurred at redshifts of z=3 to
4
Detailed studies of HeII Ly-alpha absorption toward a handful of
quasars at 2
7 COS/NUV/FUV/WFC3/UV 12248 How Dwarf Galaxies Got That Way: Mapping Multiphase Gaseous Halos and
Galactic Winds Below L* One of the most vexing problems in galaxy formation concerns how gas
accretion and feedback influence the evolution of galaxies
In high
mass galaxies, numerical simulations predict the initial fuel is
accreted through 'cold' streams, after which AGN suppress star
formation to leave galaxies red and gas-poor
In the shallow potential
wells that host dwarf galaxies, gas accretion can be very efficient,
and "superwinds" driven either by hot gas expelled by SNe or momentum
imparted by SNe and hot-star radiation are regarded as the likely
source(s) of feedback
However, major doubts persist about the physics
of gas accretion, and particularly about SN-driven feedback, including
their scalings with halo mass and their influence on the evolution of
the galaxies
While "superwinds" are visible in X-rays near the point
of their departure, they generally drop below detectable
surface-brightness limits at ~ 10 kpc
Cold clumps in winds can be
detected as blue-shifted absorption against the galaxy's own
starlight, but the radial extent of these winds are difficult to
constrain, leaving their energy, momentum, and ultimate fate
uncertain
Wind prescriptions in hydrodynamical simulations are
uncertain and at present are constrained only by indirect
observations, e
g
by their influence on the stellar masses of
galaxies and IGM metallicity
All these doubts lead to one conclusion:
we do not understand gas accretion and feedback because we generally
do not observe the infall and winds directly, in the extended gaseous
halos of galaxies, when it is happening
To do this effectively, we
must harness the power of absorption-line spectroscopy to measure the
density, temperature, metallicity, and kinematics of small quantities
of diffuse gas in galaxy halos
The most important physical
diagnostics lie in the FUV, so this is uniquely a problem for HST and
COS
We propose new COS G130M and G160M observations of 41 QSOs that
probe the gaseous halos of 44 SDSS dwarf galaxies well inside their
virial radii
Using sensitive absorption-line measurements of the
multiphase gas diagnostics Lya, CII/IV, Si II/III/IV, and other
species, supplemented by optical data from SDSS and Keck, we will map
the halos of galaxies with L = 0
02 - 0
3 L*, stellar masses M* =
10^(8-10) Msun, over impact parameter from 15 - 150 kpc
These
observations will directly constrain the content and kinematics of
accreting and outflowing material, provide a concrete target for
simulations to hit, and statistically test proposed galactic superwind
models
These observations will also inform the study of galaxies at
high z, where the shallow halo potentials that host dwarf galaxies
today were the norm
These observations are low-risk and routine for
COS, easily schedulable, and promise a major advance in our
understanding of how dwarf galaxies came to be
FGS 11298 Calibrating Cosmological Chronometers: White Dwarf Masses We propose to use HST/FGS1R to determine White Dwarf {WD} masses
The
unmatched resolving power of HST/FGS1R will be utilized to follow up
four selected WD binary pairs
This high precision obtained with
HST/FGS1R simply cannot be equaled by any ground based technique
This
proposed effort complements that done by CoI Nelan in which a sample
of WDs is being observed with HST/FGS1R
This proposal will
dramatically increase the number of WDs for which dynamical mass
measurements are possible, enabling a better calibration of the WD
mass-radius relation, cooling curves, initial to final mass relations,
and ultimately giving important clues to the star formation history of
our Galaxy and the age of its disk as well as in other galaxies
{This
project is part of Subasavage's PhD thesis work at Georgia State
University
} STIS/CCD 11845 CCD Dark Monitor Part 2 Monitor the darks for the STIS CCD
STIS/CCD 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/IR 12184 A SNAP Survey for Gravitational Lenses Among z~6 Quasars We propose a SNAP imaging survey of a complete sample of 54 quasars at
5
7 < z < 6
4 using HST/WFC3-IR to quantify the prevalence of strongly
lensed quasars at z~6
Gravitational lensing magnification bias,
boosted by the observed steep luminosity function of high-redshift
quasars, strongly suggest that lenses should be common amongst the
highest-redshift quasars known
However, the highest redshift strongly
lensed quasar known is only at z=4
8; but among the 59 quasars known
at z>5
9, only five have been imaged with HST
Our HST images will be
sensitive to the multiple images of lensed quasar, even at small
separations and large flux ratios
Based on the current best estimate
of the quasar luminosity function, we expect to discover 2-9 strongly
lensed quasars in our entire sample, or 1-4 for the nominal SNAP
completion rate of 40%
This program will likely discover the first
quasar lenses at z~6, enabling detailed follow-up observations to
constrain lensing models, to study quasar host galaxy properties and
to probe the small-scale structure of the IGM
The measurement of or
upper limit on the lensing fraction will strongly constrain the bright
end of the quasar luminosity function, leading to important
constraints on models of quasar evolution and allowing us to better
quantify the quasar contribution to the reionization photon budget
WFC3/IR 12217 Spectroscopy of Faint T Dwarf Calibrators: Understanding the
Substellar Mass Function and the Coolest Brown Dwarfs More than 100 methane brown dwarfs, or T dwarfs, have now been
discovered in the local field with 2MASS, SLOAN and UKIDSS, opening up
a new area of physics describing objects at 450-1400 K
However, very
few calibrator objects exist with well established ages and
metallicities
A very surprising result from the UKIDSS sample
(supported by 2MASS and SLOAN) is that the substellar mass function in
the local field appears to decline to lower masses, in marked contrast
to the rising initial mass function (IMF) observed in young clusters
Given that such a difference between the present day IMF and the
Galactic time-averaged IMF is unlikely, it is very possible that the
apparently falling IMF is an artifact of serious errors in either T
model atmospheres or the evolutionary isochrones
We propose WFC3
spectroscopy of 4 faint T dwarf calibrators with well established ages
and metallicities in the Pleiades and Sigma Ori clusters, and 2 faint
field T dwarfs from UKIDSS for comparison
These spectra will
constitute vital calibration data for T dwarf atmospheres with a wide
range of surface gravities, which will be used to test and improve the
model atmospheres
They will also aid preparation for future
spectroscopy of the much larger numbers of field T dwarfs to soon be
found by VISTA and WISE
These new surveys will permit a more precise
measurement of the mass function and detection of even cooler objects
WFC3/IR 12283 WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey (WISP): A Survey of Star
Formation Across Cosmic Time We will use the unique power of WFC3 slitless spectroscopy to measure
cosmic star formation across its peak epoch
The broad, continuous,
spectral coverage of the G102 and G141 grisms provides the best
currently feasible measurement of the star formation rate continously
from 0
5 Our primary science goals are: (1) Measure ratios of bright emission
lines ([OII], [OIII], Ha, and Hb) in a substantial fraction of these
galaxies, thereby estimating dust and metallicity evolution in a
sample of galaxies that is not biased by photometric selection
(2)
Derive an extinction-corrected Ha luminosity function, with a 20 times
larger sample than our previous NICMOS results
(3) Measure the
mass-metallicity relation at crucial intermediate redshifts, with the
support of our ongoing ground-based, follow-up, observing program (4)
Determine the spectroscopic close pair fraction in this sample, in
order to constrain hierarchal merging models (5) Uncover a new sample
of obscured AGN at these redshifts and, (6) Use the Balmer break
diagnostic to constrain the ages of continuum detected sources down to
H = 25
As a bonus, these observations will be sensitive to Lya emission at
z>5
5, taking advantage of continuous spectral coverage to observe
large volumes for luminous galaxies at the highest redshifts
Over
Cycles 17 and 18, we expect to detect 5-20 LAEs over redshifts
spanning 5
5 < z < 7
5
These observations will likely place the most
stringent constraint on the numbers of z>6
5 Lya emitters until JWST
We are waiving all proprietary rights to our data and will make
high-level data products available through the ST/ECF
WFC3/IR 12286 Hubble Infrared Pure Parallel Imaging Extragalactic Survey (HIPPIES) WFC3 has demonstrated its unprecedented power in probing the early
universe
Here we propose to continue our pure parallel program with
this instrument to search for LBGs at z~6--8
Our program, dubbed as
the Hubble Infrared Pure Parallel Imaging Extragalactic Survey
("HIPPIES"), will carry on the HST pure parallel legacy in the new
decade
We request 205 orbits in Cycle-18, which will spread over ~ 50
high Galactic latitude visits (|b|>20deg) that last for 3 orbits and
longer, resulting a total survey area of ~230 square arcmin
Combining
the WFC3 pure parallel observations in Cycle-17, HIPPIES will
complement other existing and forthcoming WFC3 surveys, and will make
unique contributions to the study in the new redshift frontier because
of the randomness of the survey fields
To make full use of the
parallel opportunities, HIPPIES will also take ACS parallels to study
LBGs at z~5--6
Being a pure parallel program, HIPPIES will only make
very limited demand on the scarce HST resources, but will have
potentially large scientific returns
As in previous cycle, we waive
all proprietary data rights, and will make the enhanced data products
public in a timely manner
(1) The WFC3 part of HIPPIES aims at the most luminous LBG population
at z~8 and z~7
As its survey fields are random and completely
uncorrelated, the number counts of the bright LBGs from HIPPIES will
be least affected by the "cosmic variance", and hence we will be able
to obtain the best constraint on the bright-end of the LBG luminosity
function at z~8 and 7
Comparing the result from HIPPIES to the
hydrodynamic simulations will test the input physics and provide
insight into the nature of the early galaxies
(2) The z~7--8
candidates from HIPPIES, most of which will be the brightest ones that
any surveys would be able to find, will have the best chance to be
spectroscopically confirmed at the current 8--10m telescopes
(3) The
ACS part of HIPPIES will produce a significant number of candidate
LBGs at z~5 and z~6 per ACS field
Combining with the existing,
suitable ACS fields in the HST archive, we will be able to utilize the
random nature of the survey to quantify the cosmic variance and to
measure the galaxy bias at z~5--6, and therefore the galaxy halo
masses at these redshifts
(4) We will also find a large number of
extremely red, old galaxies at intermediate redshifts, and the fine
spatial resolution offered by the WFC3 will enable us constrain their
formation history based on the study of their morphology, and hence
shed light on their connection to the very early galaxies in the
universe
WFC3/UV 12019 After the Fall: Fading AGN in Post-starburst Galaxies We propose joint Chandra and HST observations of an extraordinary
sample of 12 massive post-starburst galaxies at z=0
4-0
8 that are in
the short-lived evolution phase a few 100 Myr after the peak of
merger-driven star formation and AGN activity
We will use the data to
measure X-ray luminosities, black hole masses, and accretion rates;
and with the accurate "clocks" provided by post-starburst stellar
populations, we will directly test theoretical models that predict a
power-law decay in the AGN light curve
We will also test whether star
formation and black hole accretion shut down in lock-step, quantify
whether the black holes transition to radiatively inefficient
accretion states, and constrain the observational signatures of black
hole mergers
WFC3/UV 12345 UVIS Long Darks Test Darks during SMOV showed a systematically lower global dark rate as
well as lower scatter when compared to the Cycle 17 darks
Those two
sets of exposures differ in exposure time - 1800 sec during SMOV and
900 sec during Cycle 17
Hypothetically, the effect could be caused by
short-duration stray light, say ~500-sec in duration
During the
latter part of Cycle 17, operation of WFC3 was changed to additionally
block the light path to the detector with the CSM
This program
acquires a small number of darks at the longer SMOV exposure times
(1800 sec) in order to check whether the effect repeats in the new
operating mode
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)
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