Program Number | Principal Investigator | Program Title |
---|---|---|
11622 | Heather A. Knutson, California Institute of Technology | A Search for Water and Methane on a Neptune-Mass Transiting Planet |
12458 | Marc Postman, Space Telescope Science Institute | Through a Lens, Darkly - New Constraints on the Fundamental Components of the Cosmos |
12465 | Paul A. Crowther, University of Sheffield | A Massive Star Census of the Starburst Cluster R136 |
12477 | Fredrick W. High, University of Chicago | Weak lensing masses of the highest redshift galaxy clusters from the South Pole Telescope SZ survey |
12525 | William C. Keel, University of Alabama | Giant Ionized Clouds Around Local AGN - Obscuration and History |
12559 | Justyn R. Maund, University of Copenhagen, Niels Bohr Institute | Stellar Forensics III: A post-explosion view of the progenitors of core-collapse supernovae |
12567 | Thomas R. Ayres, University of Colorado at Boulder | Bridging STIS's Neutral Density Desert |
12581 | Julia Christine Roman-Duval, Space Telescope Science Institute - ESA | A Direct CO/H2 Abundance Measurement in Diffuse and Translucent LMC and SMC Molecular Clouds |
12586 | Kailash C. Sahu, Space Telescope Science Institute | Detecting and Measuring the Masses of Isolated Black Holes and Neutron Stars through Astrometric Microlensing |
12604 | Andrew J. Fox, Space Telescope Science Institute - ESA | Ionization in the Magellanic Stream: A Case Study of Galactic Accretion |
12605 | Giampaolo Piotto, Universita degli Studi di Padova | Advances in Understanding Multiple Stellar Generations in Globular Clusters |
12661 | Michael C. Liu, University of Hawaii | Dynamical Masses of the Coolest Brown Dwarfs |
12669 | Luigi R. Bedin, Osservatorio Astronomico di Padova | Exploring the Bottom End of the White Dwarf Cooling Sequence in the Open Cluster NGC6819 |
12812 | Zolt Levay, Space Telescope Science Institute | Hubble Heritage |
12813 | Brian Schmidt, Australian National University | Network of 13 high precision STIS spectrophotometric standards for ground based surveys |
12866 | Mark Swinbank, University of Durham | A Morphological Study of ALMA Identified Sub-mm Galaxies with HST/WFC3 |
12873 | Beth Biller, Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie, Heidelberg | Search for Planetary Mass Companions around the Coolest Brown Dwarfs |
12879 | Adam Riess, The Johns Hopkins University | A 1% Measurement of the Distance Scale with Perpendicular Spatial Scanning |
12889 | Sherry H. Suyu, Academia Sinica, Institute of Astronomy and Astrophysics | Accurate Cosmology from Gravitational Lens Time Delays |
12891 | Keith S. Noll, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center | Search For Binaries Among Ultra-Slow Rotating Trojans, Hildas, and Outer Main Belt Asteroids |
12893 | Ronald L Gilliland, The Pennsylvania State University | Study of Small and Cool Kepler Planet Candidates with High Resolution Imaging |
12903 | Luis C. Ho, Carnegie Institution of Washington | The Evolutionary Link Between Type 2 and Type 1 Quasars |
12927 | Andrew B. Newman, California Institute of Technology | The role of the environment in the growth of compact red galaxies at z~2 |
12929 | Judith L. Provencal, University of Delaware | COS Observations of Pulsating DB White Dwarfs |
12966 | Roeland P. van der Marel, Space Telescope Science Institute | The Nature of Dark Matter: Halo Cusps or Cores from dSph internal proper motion dynamics |
12993 | Jose Luis Prieto, Princeton University | The Stellar Environment of SN 2008jb: Resolving the Nature of the Progenitor |
12995 | Christopher Johns-Krull, Rice University | Testing Disk Locking in the Orion Nebula Cluster |
12999 | Ryan Foley, Smithsonian Institution Astrophysical Observatory | Are the Progenitors of SN 2002cx-like Objects Massive Stars or White Dwarfs? |
13010 | Fabio Bresolin, University of Hawaii | A precise calibration of the zero point of the cosmic distance scale from late-type eclipsing binaries in the LMC |
13012 | Laurent Lamy, Observatoire de Paris - Section de Meudon | Near-equinox spectro-imaging of Uranus aurorae sampling two planetary rotations |
GO 11622: A Search for Water and Methane on a Neptune-Mass Transiting Planet
GO 12873: Search for Planetary Mass Companions around the Coolest Brown Dwarfs
GO 12999: Are the Progenitors of SN 2002cx-like Objects Massive Stars or White Dwarfs?
GO 13012: Near-equinox spectro-imaging of Uranus aurorae sampling two planetary rotation
Nicmos image of aurorae on Uranus |
The atmospheres of the gas giant planets in the solar system are dynamic entities that can exhibit dramatic changes over a variety of timescales. In addition to changes within the atmospheres themselves, due the formation and dissipation of storms, these systems can exhibit auroral activity. Planetary aurorae are stimulated by the influx of charged particles from the Sun, which travel along magnetic field lines and funnel into the atmosphere near the magnetic poles. Aurorae therefore require that a planet has both a substantial atmosphere and a magnetic field. Aururae are common phenomena on Earth, sometimes visible at magnetic latitudes more than 40 degrees from the pole, and have also been seen on Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune.The Uranian aurorae are less intense, and were first detected by Voyager 2 during its flyby in 1986. At that time, Uranus was oriented almost pole-on to Earth, allowing observations of only one hemisphere. Now, 25 years later, Uranus has completed more than a quarter of its 84-year-period orbit, and passed through the equator-on ring plane crossing in late 2007 (see Program GO 10870 ). . As a result, we now have clear access to both the northern and southern polar regions. The peresent observing program aims to capitalise on that by targeting Uranus for observation close to its 2012 opposition, and using the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) and the Advanced Camera for Surveys Solar Blind Channel (ACS/SBC) to obtain spectra and ultraviolet imaging of the planet. The goal is to trace the evolution of active phenomena structures over a full diurnal rotation period. |