HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science

 

DAILY REPORT       # 4582

 

PERIOD COVERED: UT April 03, 2008 (DOY 094)

 

OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED

 

NIC1/NIC2/NIC3 8795

 

NICMOS Post-SAA calibration - CR Persistence Part 6

 

A new proceedure proposed to alleviate the CR-persistence problem of

NICMOS. Dark frames will be obtained immediately upon exiting the SAA

contour 23, and everytime a NICMOS exposure is scheduled within 50

minutes of coming out of the SAA. The darks will be obtained in parallel

in all three NICMOS Cameras. The POST-SAA darks will be non-standard

reference files available to users with a USEAFTER date/time mark. The

keyword 'USEAFTER=date/time' will also be added to the header of each

POST-SAA DARK frame. The keyword must be populated with the time, in

addition to the date, because HST crosses the SAA ~8 times per day so

each POST-SAA DARK will need to have the appropriate time specified, for

users to identify the ones they need. Both the raw and processed images

will be archived as POST-SAA DARKSs. Generally we expect that all NICMOS

science/calibration observations started within 50 minutes of leaving an

SAA will need such maps to remove the CR persistence from the science i

mages. Each observation will need its own CRMAP, as different SAA

passages leave different imprints on the NICMOS detectors.

 

NIC2 11219

 

Active Galactic Nuclei in nearby galaxies: a new view of the origin of

the radio-loud radio-quiet dichotomy?

 

Using archival HST and Chandra observations of 34 nearby early-type

galaxies {drawn from a complete radio selected sample} we have found

evidence that the radio-loud/radio-quiet dichotomy is directly connected

to the structure of the inner regions of their host galaxies in the

following sense: [1] Radio-loud AGN are associated with galaxies with

shallow cores in their light profiles [2] Radio-quiet AGN are only

hosted by galaxies with steep cusps. Since the brightness profile is

determined by the galaxy's evolution, through its merger history, our

results suggest that the same process sets the AGN flavour. This

provides us with a novel tool to explore the co-evolution of galaxies

and supermassive black holes, and it opens a new path to understand the

origin of the radio-loud/radio-quiet AGN dichotomy. Currently our

analysis is statistically incomplete as the brightness profile is not

available for 82 of the 116 targets. Most galaxies were not observed

with HST, while in some cases the study is obstructed by the presence of

dust features. We here propose to perform an infrared NICMOS snapshot

survey of these 82 galaxies. This will enable us to i} test the reality

of the dichotomic behaviour in a substantially larger sample; ii} extend

the comparison between radio-loud and radio-quiet AGN to a larger range

of luminosities.

 

NIC3 11120

 

A Paschen-Alpha Study of Massive Stars and the ISM in the Galactic

Center

 

The Galactic center (GC) is a unique site for a detailed study of a

multitude of complex astrophysical phenomena, which may be common to

nuclear regions of many galaxies. Observable at resolutions

unapproachable in other galaxies, the GC provides an unparalleled

opportunity to improve our understanding of the interrelationships of

massive stars, young stellar clusters, warm and hot ionized gases,

molecular clouds, large scale magnetic fields, and black holes. We

propose the first large-scale hydrogen Paschen alpha line survey of the

GC using NICMOS on the Hubble Space Telescope. This survey will lead to

a high resolution and high sensitivity map of the Paschen alpha line

emission in addition to a map of foreground extinction, made by

comparing Paschen alpha to radio emission. This survey of the inner 75

pc of the Galaxy will provide an unprecedented and complete search for

sites of massive star formation. In particular, we will be able to (1)

uncover the distribution of young massive stars in this region, (2)

locate the surfaces of adjacent molecular clouds, (3) determine

important physical parameters of the ionized gas, (4) identify compact

and ultra-compact HII regions throughout the GC. When combined with

existing Chandra and Spitzer surveys as well as a wealth of other

multi-wavelength observations, the results will allow us to address such

questions as where and how massive stars form, how stellar clusters are

disrupted, how massive stars shape and heat the surrounding medium, and

how various phases of this medium are interspersed.

 

WFPC2 11029

 

WFPC2 CYCLE 15 Intflat Linearity Check and Filter Rotation Anomaly

Monitor

 

Intflat observations will be taken to provide a linearity check: the

linearity test consists of a series of intflats in F555W, in each gain

and each shutter. A combination of intflats, visflats, and earthflats

will be used to check the repeatability of filter wheel motions.

{Intflat sequences tied to decons, visits 1-18 in prop 10363, have been

moved to the cycle 15 decon proposal xxxx for easier scheduling.} Note:

long-exposure WFPC2 intflats must be scheduled during ACS anneals to

prevent stray light from the WFPC2 lamps from contaminating long ACS

external exposures.

 

WFPC2 11083

 

The Structure, Formation and Evolution of Galactic Cores and Nuclei

 

A surprising result has emerged from the ACS Virgo Cluster Survey

{ACSVCS}, a program to obtain ACS/WFC gz imaging for a large, unbiased

sample of 100 early-type galaxies in the Virgo Cluster. On subarcsecond

scales {i.e., <0.1"-1"}, the HST brightness profiles vary systematically

from the brightest giants {which have nearly constant surface brightness

cores} to the faintest dwarfs {which have compact stellar nuclei}.

Remarkably, the fraction of galaxy mass contributed by the nuclei in the

faint galaxies is identical to that contributed by supermassive black

holes in the bright galaxies {0.2%}. These findings strongly suggest

that a single mechanism is responsible for both types of Central Massive

Object: most likely internally or externally modulated gas inflows that

feed central black holes or lead to the formation of "nuclear star

clusters". Understanding the history of gas accretion, star formation

and chemical enrichment on subarcsecond scales has thus emerged as the

single most pressing question in the study of nearby galactic nuclei,

either active or quiescent. We propose an ambitious HST program {199

orbits} that constitutes the next, obvious step forward:

high-resolution, ultraviolet {WFPC2/F255W} and infrared {NIC1/F160W}

imaging for the complete ACSVCS sample. By capitalizing on HST's unique

ability to provide high-resolution images with a sharp and stable PSF at

UV and IR wavelengths, we will leverage the existing optical HST data to

obtain the most complete picture currently possible for the history of

star formation and chemical enrichment on these small scales. Equally

important, this program will lead to a significant improvement in the

measured structural parameters and density distributions for the stellar

nuclei and the underlying galaxies, and provide a sensitive measure of

"frosting" by young stars in the galaxy cores. By virtue of its superb

image quality and stable PSF, NICMOS is the sole instrument capable of

the IR observations proposed here. In the case of the WFPC2

observations, high-resolution UV imaging {< 0.1"} is a capability unique

to HST, yet one that could be lost at any time.

 

WFPC2 11121

 

Proper Motion of the Remarkable Irradiated Jet HH399 in the Trifid

Nebula

 

The Trifid nebula has recently been of much interest because of its

identification with a large number of massive protostars, as well as

young stellar objects. HH 399 is one of the most spectacular Herbig-Haro

flows recognized to be irradiated by the UV flux of the massive O7.5

star in the Trifid nebula. The irradiated jet, which is propagating in a

fully ionized medium, contains numerous knots along the jet and also

shows evidence for a number of isolated knots running immediately

outside the jet. Two different HST observations of the nebula, with

different scientific goals, were carried out in 1997 and 2002, having

sensitivities that differed by a factor of 10. We performed preliminary

proper motion measurements of the jet based on these observations and

discovered a continuous velocity structure of the bright knots of about

230 km/sec. Here we propose four WFPC2 orbits to reobserve HH 399 in

order to carry out accurate proper motion measurements over the full

extent of the jet, based on observations spanning more than 10 years and

having equally deep sensitivity. The proposed observations are not

simply a repeat of previous measurements, as this will be the first

highly accurate proper motion measurement of an irradiated jet based on

two identical epochs of WFPC2 observations. The observations will

improve the accuracy of proper motion measurements for HH 399 by more

than a factor of five and will address important questions beyond our

preliminary result. Currently measured velocity differences between the

jet features are barely significant. The factor of 5 increase in

accuracy will establish the evidence for deceleration along the jet and

the lateral motion of the jet. In addition, these measurements will

address the kinematics of individual entrained and isolated blobs of the

jet as it propagates into an HII region associated with the nebula. This

is the last opportunity to perform this experiment before WFPC2 is

removed from HST.

 

WFPC2 11128

 

Time Scales Of Bulge Formation In Nearby Galaxies

 

Traditionally, bulges are thought to fit well into galaxy formation

models of hierarchical merging. However, it is now becoming well

established that many bulges formed through internal, secular evolution

of the disk rather than through mergers. We call these objects

pseudobulges. Much is still unknown about pseudobulges, the most

pressing questions being: How, exactly, do they build up their mass? How

long does it take? And, how many exist? We are after an answer to these

questions. If pseudobulges form and evolve over longer periods than the

time between mergers, then a significant population of pseudobulges is

hard to explain within current galaxy formation theories. A pseudobulge

indicates that a galaxy has most likely not undergone a major merger

since the formation of the disk. The ages of pseudobulges give us an

estimate for the time scale of this quiescent evolution. We propose to

use 24 orbits of HST time to complete UBVIH imaging on a sample of 33

nearby galaxies that we have observed with Spitzer in the mid-IR. These

data will be used to measure spatially resolved stellar population

parameters {mean stellar age, metallicity, and star formation history};

comparing ages to star formation rates allows us to accurately constrain

the time scale of pseudobulge formation. Our sample of bulges includes

both pseudo- and classical bulges, and evenly samples barred and

unbarred galaxies. Most of our sample is imaged, 13 have complete UBVIH

coverage; we merely ask to complete missing observations so that we may

construct a uniform sample for studying bulge formation. We also wish to

compare the stellar population parameters to a variety of bulge and

global galaxy properties including star formation rates, dynamics,

internal bulge morphology, structure from bulge-disk decompositions, and

gas content. Much of this data set is already or is being assembled.

This will allow us to derive methods of pseudobulge identification that

can be used to accurately count pseudobulges in large surveys. Aside

from our own science goals, we will present this broad set of data to

the community. Thus, we waive proprietary periods for all observations.

 

WFPC2 11229

 

SEEDS: The Search for Evolution of Emission from Dust in Supernovae with

HST and Spitzer

 

The role that massive stars play in the dust content of the Universe is

extremely uncertain. It has long been hypothesized that dust can

condense within the ejecta of supernovae {SNe}, however there is a

frustrating discrepancy between the amounts of dust found in the early

Universe, or predicted by nucleation theory, and inferred from SN

observations. Our SEEDS collaboration has been carefully revisiting the

observational case for dust formation by core- collapse SNe, in order to

quantify their role as dust contributors in the early Universe. As dust

condenses in expanding SN ejecta, it will increase in optical depth,

producing three simultaneously observable phenomena: {1} increasing

optical extinction; {2} infrared {IR} excesses; and {3} asymmetric

blue-shifted emission lines. Our SEEDS collaboration recently reported

all three phenomena occurring in SN2003gd, demonstrating the success of

our observing strategy, and permitting us to derive a dust mass of up to

0.02 solar masses created in the SN. To advance our understanding of the

origin and evolution of the interstellar dust in galaxies, we propose to

use HST's WFPC2 and NICMOS instruments plus Spitzer's photometric

instruments to monitor ten recent core-collapse SNe for dust formation

and, as a bonus, detect light echoes that can affect the dust mass

estimates. These space-borne observations will be supplemented by

ground-based spectroscopic monitoring of their optical emission line

profiles. These observations would continue our 2-year HST and Spitzer

monitoring of this phenomena in order to address two key questions: Do

all SNe produce dust? and How much dust do they produce? As all the SN

are within 15 Mpc, each SN stands an excellent chance of detection with

HST and Spitzer and of resolving potential light echoes.

 

WFPC2 11326

 

Polarizers Closeout (Internal Observations)

 

Verify stability of polarization calibration.

 

FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:

 

Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports

of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated.)

 

HSTARS:

11239 - GSacq(2,1,2) failed, Search Radius Limit exceeded on FGS 2

           Upon acquisition of signal at 12:55:55, vehicle was in gyro control with

           FGS2 search radius limit and stop flags set. GSACQ(2,1,2) at 12:11:54

           failed to RGA control. One 486 status buffer "A05" message (FGS Coarse

           Track failed- Search Radius Limit exceeded) was received. OBAD at

           11:59:49 prior to GSACQ had RSS error correction of 15.40 arc seconds,

           OBAD map at 12:57:29 after GSACQ had RSS error of 2340.74 arcseconds.

 

           OBAD at 11:51:59 prior to GSACQ had RSS error correction of 5217.70

           arc seconds.

 

11240 - GSacq(2,1,2) failed, Search Radius Limit exceeded on FGS 2

           Upon acquisition of signal at 14:02:15, vehicle was in gyro control with

           FGS2 search radius limit and stop flags set. GSACQ(2,1,2) at 13:47:16

           failed to RGA control. One 486 status buffer "A05" message (FGS Coarse

           Track failed- Search Radius Limit exceeded) was received. OBAD at

           13:35:37 prior to GSACQ had RSS error correction of 11.12 arc seconds,

           OBAD map at 14:32:55 after GSACQ had RSS error of 1678.45 arcseconds.

 

 

*

11242 - GSAcq(2,1,2) failed

           OTA SE review of PTAS processing revealed that GSAcq(2,1,2) at

           086/23:42:09 failed to RGA Hold with a stop flag on FGS2.

 

 

 

COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)

 

COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)

 

                      SCHEDULED      SUCCESSFUL 

FGS GSacq               10                 08   

FGS REacq               03                 03             

OBAD with Maneuver 28                 28                 

 

SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)