HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to Collect World Class Science

 

DAILY REPORT #5078

 

PERIOD COVERED: 5am April 19 - 5am April 20, 2010 (DOY 109/09:00z-110/09:00z)

 

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 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 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.

 

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<d<21 kpc, 3<|z|<13 kpc). COS

will provide atomic to highly ionized species (e.g.,OI, CII, CIV, SiIV)

that can be observed at sufficient resolution (R~22, 000) to not only

detect these highly ionized HVCs but also to model their properties and

understand their physics and origins. This survey is only possible

because of the high sensitivity of COS in the FUV spectral range.

 

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.

 

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.

 

STIS/CC 12078

 

Verification of Adjustment to Two STIS MSM Positions

 

Two STIS CCD CENWAVE positions (G430M 5216 & G750M 6094) project onto

the detector at a row that differs significantly from the nominal

position near the center of the detector. This proposal will test the

MSM updates to properly center these positions.

 

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/IR 11600

 

Star Formation, Extinction, and Metallicity at 0.7<z<1.5: H-Alpha Fluxes

and Sizes from a Grism Survey of GOODS-N

 

The global star formation rate (SFR) is ~10x higher at z=1 than today.

This could be due to drastically elevated SFR in some fraction of

galaxies, such as mergers with central bursts, or a higher SFR across

the board. Either means that the conditions in z=1 star forming galaxies

could be quite different from local objects. The next step beyond

measuring the global SFR is to determine the dependence of SFR,

obscuration, metallicity, and size of the star-forming region on galaxy

mass and redshift. However, SFR indicators at z=1 typically apply local

calibrations for UV, [O II] and far-IR, and do not agree with each other

on a galaxy-by-galaxy basis. Extinction, metallicity, and dust

properties cause uncontrolled offsets in SFR calibrations. The great

missing link is Balmer H-alpha, the most sensitive probe of SFR. We

propose a slitless WFC3/G141 IR grism survey of GOODS-N, at 2

orbits/pointing. It will detect Ha+[N II] emission from 0.7<z<1.5, to

L(Ha) = 1.7 x 10^41 erg/sec at z=1, measuring H-alpha fluxes and sizes

for > 600 galaxies, and a small number of higher-redshift emitters. This

will produce: an emission-line redshift survey unbiased by magnitude and

color selection; star formation rates as a function of galaxy

properties, e.g. stellar mass and morphology/mergers measured by ACS;

comparisons of SFRs from H-alpha to UV and far-IR indicators;

calibrations of line ratios of H-alpha to important nebular lines such

as [O II] and H-beta, measuring variations in metallicity and extinction

and their effect on SFR estimates; and the first measurement of scale

lengths of the H-alpha emitting, star- forming region in a large sample

of z~1 sources.

 

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 11719

 

A Calibration Database for Stellar Models of Asymptotic Giant Branch

Stars

 

Studies of galaxy formation and evolution rely increasingly on the

interpretation and modeling of near-infrared observations. At these

wavelengths, the brightest stars are intermediate mass asymptotic giant

branch (AGB) stars. These stars can contribute nearly 50% of the

integrated luminosity at near infrared and even optical wavelengths,

particularly for the younger stellar populations characteristic of

high-redshift galaxies (z>1). AGB stars are also significant sources of

dust and heavy elements. Accurate modeling of AGB stars is therefore of

the utmost importance.

 

The primary limitation facing current models is the lack of useful

calibration data. Current models are tuned to match the properties of

the AGB population in the Magellanic Clouds, and thus have only been

calibrated in a very narrow range of sub-solar metallicities.

Preliminary observations already suggest that the models are

overestimating AGB lifetimes by factors of 2-3 at lower metallicities.

At higher (solar) metallicities, there are no appropriate observations

for calibrating the models.

 

We propose a WFC3/IR SNAP survey of nearby galaxies to create a large

database of AGB populations spanning the full range of metallicities and

star formation histories. Because of their intrinsically red colors and

dusty circumstellar envelopes, tracking the numbers and bolometric

fluxes of AGB stars requires the NIR observations we propose here. The

resulting observations of nearby galaxies with deep ACS imaging offer

the opportunity to obtain large (100-1000's) complete samples of AGB

stars at a single distance, in systems with well-constrained star

formation histories and metallicities.

 

WFC3/UV 12077

 

Monitoring the Aftermath of an Asteroid Impact Event

 

Our Director's Discretionary program (GO-12053) to image the newly

discovered object P/2010 A2 executed successfully on 2010 Jan 25 and 29

with spectacular results. Hubble has apparently borne witness to the

first detection of a collision in the asteroid belt. Hubble imaging with

the WFC3 has revealed an object unlike anything ever seen before and

with details impossible to detect with any other facility. We request 6

more orbits of Hubble time (1 orbit every 20 days over the next few

months, until the object enters Hubble's solar exclusion zone in

late-June 2010) to monitor the evolution of this remarkable object and

further clarify the nature of this event. These observations may usher

in a new era of searching for and characterizing collisional events

within the asteroid belt.

 

WFC3/UVIS 11565

 

A Search for Astrometric Companions to Very Low-Mass, Population II

Stars

 

We propose to carry out a Snapshot search for astrometric companions in

a subsample of very low-mass, halo subdwarfs identified within 120

parsecs of the Sun. These ultra-cool M subdwarfs are local

representatives of the lowest-mass H burning objects from the Galactic

Population II. The expected 3-4 astrometric doubles that will be

discovered will be invaluable in that they will be the first systems

from which gravitational masses of metal-poor stars at the bottom of the

main sequence can be directly measured.

 

WFC3/UVIS 11650

 

Mutual Orbits, Colors, Masses, and Bulk Densities of 3 Cold Classical

Trans-Neptunian Binaries

 

Many Trans-Neptunian Objects (TNOs) have been found to be binary or

multiple systems. As in other astrophysical settings, Trans-Neptunian

Binaries (TNBs) offer uniquely valuable information. Their mutual orbits

allow the direct determination of their system masses, perhaps the most

fundamental physical quantity of any astronomical object. Their

frequency of occurrence and dynamical characteristics provide clues to

formation conditions and evolution scenarios affecting both the binaries

and their single neighbors. Combining masses with sizes, bulk densities

can be measured. Densities constrain bulk composition and internal

structure, key clues to TNO origins and evolution over time. Several TNB

bulk densities have been determined, hinting at interesting trends. But

none of them belongs to the Cold Classical sub-population, the one group

of TNOs with demonstrably distinct physical characteristics. Two

top-priority Spitzer programs will soon observe and measure the sizes of

3 Cold Classical TNBs. This proposal seeks to determine the mutual

orbits and thus masses of these systems, enabling computation of their

densities.

 

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:

18845-0 - Null Genslew for Proposal 12077 - slot 14 @ 109/1252z

 

COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)

 

                    SCHEDULED    SUCCESSFUL             

FGS GSAcq             11               11              

FGS REAcq               7                7              

OBAD with Maneuver 7                7              

 

SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)