HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science

 

DAILY REPORT      #5039

 

PERIOD COVERED: 5am February 23 - 5am February 24, 2010 (DOY 054/10:00z-055/10:00z)

 

OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED

 

COS/NUV/FUV 11522

 

COS-GTO: Star Formation/Lyman-Alpha

 

A sample of 20 star-forming galaxies will be observed with COS G130M.

The galaxies were selected from the Kitt Peak International

Spectroscopic Survey (KISSR) data release and cover a broad range of

luminosity, oxygen abundance, and reddening. The goal of the program is

to characterize the Lyman-alpha properties and establish correlations

with fundamental galaxy properties. Each galaxy will be observed for one

orbit.

 

COS/NUV/FUV 11698

 

The Structure and Dynamics of Virgo's Multi-Phase Intracluster Medium

 

The dynamical flows of the intracluster medium (ICM) are largely

unknown. We propose to map the spatial and kinematic distribution of the

warm ICM of the nearby Virgo cluster using the Cosmic Origins

Spectrograph. 15 sightlines at a range of impact parameters within the

virial radius of the cluster (0.2 - 1.7 Mpc) will be probed for

Lyman-alpha absorption and the data compared to blind HI, dust and x-ray

surveys to create a multi-phase map of the cluster's ICM. Absorption

line sightlines are commonly 40-100 kpc from a galaxy, allowing the flow

of baryons between galaxies and the ICM to be assessed. The velocity

distribution of the absorbers will be directly compared to simulations

and used to constrain the turbulent motions of the ICM. This proposal

will result in the first map of a cluster's warm ICM and provide

important tests for our theoretical understanding of cluster formation

and the treatment of gas cooling in cosmological simulations.

 

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.

 

NIC2/WFC3/IR 11548

 

Infrared Imaging of Protostars in the Orion A Cloud: The Role of

Environment in Star Formation

 

We propose NICMOS and WFC3/IR observations of a sample of 252 protostars

identified in the Orion A cloud with the Spitzer Space Telescope. These

observations will image the scattered light escaping the protostellar

envelopes, providing information on the shapes of outflow cavities, the

inclinations of the protostars, and the overall morphologies of the

envelopes. In addition, we ask for Spitzer time to obtain 55-95 micron

spectra of 75 of the protostars. Combining these new data with existing

3.6 to 70 micron photometry and forthcoming 5-40 micron spectra measured

with the Spitzer Space Telescope, we will determine the physical

properties of the protostars such as envelope density, luminosity,

infall rate, and outflow cavity opening angle. By examining how these

properties vary with stellar density (i.e. clusters vs. groups vs.

isolation) and the properties of the surrounding molecular cloud; we can

directly measure how the surrounding environment influences protostellar

evolution, and consequently, the formation of stars and planetary

systems. Ultimately, this data will guide the development of a theory of

protostellar evolution.

 

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/CCD 11844

 

CCD Dark Monitor Part 1

 

The purpose of this proposal is to monitor the darks for the STIS CCD.

 

STIS/CCD 11846

 

CCD Bias Monitor-Part 1

 

The purpose of this proposal is to 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 11849

 

STIS CCD Hot Pixel Annealing

 

This purpose of this activity is to repair radiation induced hot pixel

damage to the STIS CCD by warming the CCD to the ambient instrument

temperature and annealing radiation-damaged pixels.

 

Radiation damage creates hot pixels in the STIS CCD Detector. Many of

these hot pixels can be repaired by warming the CCD from its normal

operating temperature near -83 deg. C to the ambient instrument

temperature (~ +5 deg. C) for several hours. The number of hot pixels

repaired is a function of annealing temperature. The effectiveness of

the CCD hot pixel annealing process is assessed by measuring the dark

current behavior before and after annealing and by searching for any

window contamination effects.

 

WFC3/ACS/UVIS 11684

 

The First Proper Motion Measurement for M31: Dynamics and Mass of the

Local Group

 

We will perform observations to determine the proper motion of the

Andromeda galaxy M31, which has been sought for almost a century without

success. While challenging, this measurement has now become possible due

to the availability of existing deep ACS/WFC images of several M31

fields. The requested second epoch images will yield the average shift

of the M31 stars with respect to compact galaxies in the background. Our

observing strategy uses six different fields (three primary and three

coordinated parallel) with two different instruments (ACS and WFC3) to

provide a maximum handle on possible systematic effects. The expected

result will be sufficiently accurate to: (a) discriminate between

different histories for the dynamics of the Local Group; (b) constrain

the mass distribution of the Local Group; (c) determine the details of

the expected future merger between M31 and the Milky Way; (d) infer the

past interaction history between M31 and M33; (e) constrain the internal

proper motion kinematics of the M31 spheroid, outer disk, and tidal

stream; and (f) obtain a pilot estimate of the M31 distance through the

method of rotational parallax.

 

WFC3/IR 11591

 

Are Low-Luminosity Galaxies Responsible for Cosmic Reionization?

 

Our group has demonstrated that massive clusters, acting as powerful

cosmic lenses, can constrain the abundance and properties of

low-luminosity star-forming sources beyond z~6; such sources are thought

to be responsible for ending cosmic reionization. The large

magnification possible in the critical regions of well-constrained

clusters brings sources into view that lie at or beyond the limits of

conventional exposures such as the UDF. We have shown that the

combination of HST and Spitzer is particularly effective in delivering

the physical properties of these distant sources, constraining their

mass, age and past star formation history. Indirectly, we therefore gain

a valuable glimpse to yet earlier epochs. Recognizing the result (and

limitations) of blank field surveys, we propose a systematic search

through 10 lensing clusters with ACS/F814W and WFC3/[F110W+F160W] (in

conjunction with existing deep IRAC data). Our goal is to measure with

great accuracy the luminosity function at z~7 over a range of at least 3

magnitude, based on the identification of about 50 lensed galaxies at

6.5<z<8. Our survey will mitigate cosmic variance and extend the search

both to lower luminosities and, by virtue of the WFC3/IRAC combination,

to higher redshift. Thanks to the lensing amplification spectroscopic

follow-up will be possible and make our findings the most robust prior

to the era of JWST and the ELTs.

 

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/UVIS 11589

 

Hypervelocity Stars as Unique Probes of the Galactic Center and Outer

Halo

 

We propose to obtain high-resolution images of 11 new hypervelocity

stars in the Galactic halo in order to establish the first-epoch

astrometric frame, as a part of a long-term program to measure precise

proper motions in an absolute inertial frame. The origin of these

recently discovered stars with extremely large positive radial

velocities, in excess of the escape speed from the Galaxy, is consistent

only with being ejected from the deep potential well of the massive

black hole at the Galactic center. Reconstructing the full

three-dimensional space motion of the hypervelocity stars, through

astrometric proper motions, provides a unique opportunity to measure the

shape and orientation of the triaxial dark matter halo. The

hypervelocity stars allow determination of the Galactic potential out to

120 kpc, independently of and at larger distances than is afforded by

tidal streams of satellite galaxies such as the Sagittarius dSph galaxy.

Proper motions of the full set of hypervelocity stars will provide

unique constraints on massive star formation in the environment of the

Galactic center and on the history of stellar ejection by the

supermassive black hole. We request one orbit with WFC3 for each of the

11 hypervelocity stars to establish their current positions relative to

background galaxies. We request a repeated observation of these stars in

Cycle 19, which will conclusively measure the astrometric proper

motions.

 

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).

 

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              10            10        

FGS REAcq               7             7         

OBAD with Maneuver 7             7         

 

SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)