HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science

 

DAILY REPORT      #4831

 

PERIOD COVERED: 5am April 10 - 5am April 13, 2009 (DOY

                          100/0900z-103/0900z)

 

OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED

 

WFPC2 11990

 

Determining the Physical Properties of Comet 103P/Hartley 2 in Support

of NASA's EPOXI Mission

 

We request 12 orbits of imaging to measure the size, shape, and rotation

period of the nucleus of comet 103P/Hartley 2, the target of NASA's

EPOXI mission. Knowledge of rotation period at the 20% level is required

early to plan the mission sequencing, and the only time to secure these

observations before the coma signal dominates the nucleus is during the

first half of 2009. As demonstrated by the international campaigns to

determine the rotation period of comet 9P/Tempel 1 for both the Deep

Impact and Stardust-NExT missions, spacecraft and Earth-based

observations can be combined to achieve unprecedented accuracy on the

rotation of the nucleus. For comet Tempel 1 this has led to

paradigm-changing ideas about the physical processes responsible for

cometary activity. The nucleus flyby of 103P/Hartley 2 on 2010 November

4 presents another opportunity for unique science enabled by combining

ground-based and in-situ observations. The size and shape of the comet's

nucleus are currently uncertain, and the rotation period is completely

unknown. Hubble observations are uniquely suited to measure the physical

properties of this nucleus.

 

WFPC2 11987

 

The Recent Star Formation History of SINGS Galaxies

 

The Spitzer Legacy project SINGS provided a unique view of the current

state of star formation and dust in a sample of galaxies of all Hubble

types. This multi-wavelength view allowed the team to create current

star formation diagnostics that are independent of the dust content and

increased our understanding of the dust in galaxies. Even so, using the

SINGS data alone we can only make rough estimates of the recent star

formation history of these galaxies. The lack of U-band observations

means that it is impossible to estimate the ages of young clusters. In

addition, the low resolution of the Spitzer and ground-based

observations means that what appear to be individual Spitzer sources can

actually be composed of many individual clusters with varying ages. In

this proposal we plan to address this missing area in SINGS by obtaining

high-resolution WFPC2 UBVI observations to accurately find and determine

the ages of the young stellar clusters in a subset of the SINGS

galaxies. These observations will greatly enhance the legacy value of

the SINGS observations while also directly answering questions

pertaining to star formation in galaxies.

 

ACS/SBC 11982

 

Spanning the Reionization History of IGM Helium: a Large and Efficient

HST Spectral Survey of Far-UV-Bright Quasars

 

The reionization of IGM helium is thought to have occurred at redshifts

of z=3 to 4. Detailed studies of HeII Lyman-alpha absorption toward a

handful of QSOs at 2.7<z<3.3 demonstrated the high potential of such IGM

probes, but the small sample size and redshift range limit confidence in

cosmological inferences. The requisite unobscured sightlines to high-z

are extremely rare, but we've cross-correlated 10, 000 z>2.8 SDSS DR7

(and other) quasars with GALEX GR4 UV sources to obtain 550 new, high

confidence, sightlines potentially useful for HST HeII studies; and in

cycle 15-16 trials we demonstrated the efficacy of our SDSS/GALEX

selection approach identifying 9 new HeII quasars at unprecedented 67%

efficiency. We propose the first far-UV-bright HeII quasar survey that

is both large in scale and also efficient, via 2-orbit reconnaissance

ACS/SBC prism spectra toward a highly select subset of 40 new SDSS/GALEX

quasars at 3.1<z<5.1. These will provide a community resource list that

includes 5 far-UV-bright (restframe) HeII sightlines in each of 8

redshift bins spanning 3.1<z<3.9 (and perhaps several objects at z>4),

enabling superb post-SM4 follow-up spectra with COS or STIS. But

simultaneously and independent of any SM4 uncertainties, we will hereby

directly obtain 10-orbit UV spectral stacks from the 5 HeII quasars in

each of the 8 redshift bins to trace the reionization history of IGM

helium over at least 3.1<z<3.9. These spectral stacks will average over

cosmic variance and individual object pathology. Our new high-yield HeII

sightline sample and spectral stacks, covering a large redshift range,

will allow confident conclusions about the spectrum and evolution of the

ionizing background, the evolution of HeII opacity, the density of IGM

baryons, and the epoch of helium reionization.

 

WFPC2 11978

 

Luminous and Dark Matter in Disk Galaxies from Strong Lensing and

Stellar Kinematics

 

The formation of realistic disk galaxies within the LCDM paradigm is

still an unsolved problem. Theory is only now beginning to make

predictions for how dark matter halos respond to galaxy formation and

for the properties of disk galaxies. Measuring the density profiles of

dark matter halos on galaxy scales is therefore a strong test for the

standard paradigm of galaxy formation, offering great potential for

discovery. However, from an observational point of view, the degeneracy

between the stellar and dark matter contributions to galaxy rotation

curves remains a major road block. Strong gravitational lensing, when

coupled to spatially-resolved kinematics and stellar population models,

can solve this long-standing problem. Unfortunately, this joint

methodology could not be exploited so far due to the paucity of known

edge-on spiral lenses. Exploiting the full SDSS-DR7 archive we have

identified a new sample of exactly these systems. We propose multi-color

HST imaging to confirm and measure a sample of twenty spiral lenses,

covering a range of bulge to disk ratios. By combining dynamical lensing

and stellar population information for this unique sample we will

deliver the first statistical constraints on halos and disk properties,

and a new stringent test of disk galaxy formation theories.

 

WFPC2 11975

 

UV Light from Old Stellar Populations: a Census of UV Sources in

Galactic Globular Clusters

 

In spite of the fact that HST has been the only operative

high-resolution eye in the UV-window over the last 18 years, no

homogeneous UV survey of Galactic globular clusters (GGCs) has been

performed to date. In order to fill this gap in the stellar population

studies, we propose a program that exploits the unique capability of the

WFPC2 and the SBC in the far-/mid- UV for securing deep UV imaging of 46

GGCs. The proposed observations will allow to study with unprecedented

accuracy the hottest GGC stars, comprising the extreme horizontal branch

(HB) stars and their progeny (the so-called AGB-manque', and Post-early

AGB stars), and "exotic stellar populations" like the blue straggler

stars and the interacting binaries. The targets have been selected to

properly sample the GGC metallicity/structural parameter space, thus to

unveil any possible correlation between the properties of the hot

stellar populations and the cluster characteristics. In addition, most

of the targets have extended HB "blue tails", that can be properly

studied only by means of deep UV observations, especially in the far-UV

filters like the F160BW, that is not foreseen on the WFC3. This data

base is complemented with GALEX observations in the cluster outermost

regions, thus allowing to investigate any possible trend of the

UV-bright stellar types over the entire radial extension of the

clusters. Although the hottest GGC stars are just a small class of

"special" objects, their study has a broad relevance in the context of

structure formation and chemical evolution in the early Universe,

bringing precious information on the basic star formation processes and

the origin of blue light from galaxies. Indeed, the proposed

observations will provide the community with an unprecedented data set

suitable for addressing a number of still open astrophysical questions,

ranging from the main drivers of the HB morphology and the mass loss

processes, to the origin of the UV upturn in elliptical galaxies, the

dating of distant systems from integrated light, and the complex

interplay between stellar evolution and dynamics in dense stellar

aggregates. In the spirit of constructing a community resource, we

entirely waive the proprietary period for these observations.

 

FGS 11944/11943

 

Binaries at the Extremes of the H-R Diagram

 

We propose to use HST/Fine Guidance Sensor 1r to survey for binaries

among some of the most massive, least massive, and oldest stars in our

part of the Galaxy. FGS allows us to spatially resolve binary systems

that are too faint to observe using ground-based, speckle or optical

long baseline interferometry, and too close to resolve with AO. We

propose a SNAP-style program of single orbit FGS TRANS mode observations

of very massive stars in the cluster NGC 3603, luminous blue variables,

nearby low mass main sequence stars, cool subdwarf stars, and white

dwarfs. These observations will help us to (1) identify systems suitable

for follow up studies for mass determination, (2) study the role of

binaries in stellar birth and in advanced evolutionary states, (3)

explore the fundamental properties of stars near the main sequence-brown

dwarf boundary, (4) understand the role of binaries for X-ray bright

systems, (5) find binaries among ancient and nearby subdwarf stars, and

(6) help calibrate the white dwarf mass - radius relation.

 

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.

 

WFPC2 11316

 

HST Cycle 16 & Pre-SM4 Optical Monitor

 

This is a continuation of the Cycle 15 & pre-SM4 Optical Monitor, 11020.

Please see that proposal for a more complete description of the

observing strategy. The 6 visits comprising this proposal observe two

single standard stars with WFPC2/PC in order to establish overall OTA

focal length for the purposes of focus maintenance. The goal of this

monitoring before SM4 is to establish a best estimate of the OTA focus

entering SMOV.

 

FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:

 

Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports

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

 

HSTARS:

11767 – GSAcq (2,3,2) scheduled from 100/22:37:13 - 22:45:18 failed to

           RGA Hold due to QF2STOPF and QSTOP flag indications on FGS-2

 

           Observations affected: Astrometry, Proposal ID# 11944

 

 

11768 – GSAcq (1,2,2) at 102/09:20:45 failed to RGA control at 102/09:24:59

           with QF1STOPF and QSTOP flags set.

 

           Observations affected: WFPC 149 - 151, Proposal ID# 11987.

 

COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)

 

COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)

 

                      SCHEDULED      SUCCESSFUL

FGS GSAcq               25                 23 

FGS REAcq               19                 19                 

OBAD with Maneuver 88                 88               

 

 

 

SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)