Program Number | Principal Investigator | Program Title |
---|---|---|
12473 | David Kent Sing, University of Exeter | An Optical Transmission Spectral Survey of hot-Jupiter Exoplanetary Atmospheres |
12474 | Boris T. Gaensicke, The University of Warwick | The frequency and chemical composition of rocky planetary debris around young white dwarfs |
12506 | Adam L. Kraus, University of Hawaii | A Precise Mass-Luminosity-Temperature Relation for Young Stars |
12562 | Geoffrey C. Clayton, Louisiana State University and A & M College | The UV Interstellar Extinction Properties in the Super-Solar Metallicity Galaxy M31 |
12568 | Matthew A. Malkan, University of California - Los Angeles | WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey WISP: A Survey of Star Formation Across Cosmic Time |
12572 | Michele Trenti, University of Cambridge | The Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies Pure Parallel Survey |
12590 | Casey Papovich, Texas A & M University | Galaxy Assembly at High Densities: HST Dissection of a Cluster at z=1.62 |
12790 | Marc Postman, Space Telescope Science Institute | Through a Lens, Darkly - New Constraints on the Fundamental Components of the Cosmos |
12815 | Kevin Luhman, The Pennsylvania State University | Photometry of the Coldest Benchmark Brown Dwarf |
12861 | Xiaohui Fan, University of Arizona | Morphologies of the Most UV luminous Lyman Break Galaxies at z~3 |
12870 | Boris T. Gaensicke, The University of Warwick | The mass and temperature distribution of accreting white dwarfs |
12876 | Kevin France, University of Colorado at Boulder | Project WHIPS {Warm H2 In Protoplanetary Systems}: Direct Measurement of Molecular Abundances in Circumstellar Disks |
12879 | Adam Riess, The Johns Hopkins University | A 1% Measurement of the Distance Scale with Perpendicular Spatial Scanning |
12880 | Adam Riess, The Johns Hopkins University | The Hubble Constant: Completing HST's Legacy with WFC3 |
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 |
12896 | Kim-Vy Tran, Texas A & M University | At the Turn of the Tide: WFC3/IR Imaging and Spectroscopy of Two Galaxy Clusters at z~2 |
12902 | Matthew A. Malkan, University of California - Los Angeles | WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey WISP: A Survey of Star Formation Across Cosmic Time |
12941 | Ian William Stephens, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign | Probing Isolated Massive Star Formation in the LMC |
12949 | Daniel Perley, California Institute of Technology | Unveiling the Dusty Universe with the Host Galaxies of Obscured GRBs |
12970 | Michael C. Cushing, University of Toledo | Completing the Census of Ultracool Brown Dwarfs in the Solar Neighborhood using HST/WFC3 |
12980 | Kohji Tsumura, ISAS, Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency | Absolute Measurement of the Cosmic Near-Infrared Background Using Eclipsed Galilean Satellites as Occulters |
12982 | Nicolas Lehner, University of Notre Dame | Are the Milky Way's High Velocity Clouds Fuel for Star Formation or for the Galactic Corona? |
12987 | Saul A Rappaport, Eureka Scientific Inc. | Possible Disintegrating Short-Period Super-Mercury Orbiting KIC 12557548 |
12995 | Christopher Johns-Krull, Rice University | Testing Disk Locking in the Orion Nebula Cluster |
12998 | Deborah Padgett, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center | STIS Coronagraphy of Bright New Debris Disks from the WISE All-Sky Survey |
13007 | Lee Armus, California Institute of Technology | UV Imaging of Luminous Infrared Galaxies in the GOALS Sample |
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 |
13019 | Edward F. Guinan, Villanova University | Probing the Complicated Atmospheres of Cepheids with HST-COS: Plasma Dynamics, Shock Energetics and Heating Mechanisms |
13023 | Marco Chiaberge, Space Telescope Science Institute - ESA | Universe in transition: powerful activity in the Bright Ages |
13025 | Andrew J. Levan, The University of Warwick | Unveiling the progenitors of the most luminous supernovae |
13046 | Robert P. Kirshner, Harvard University | RAISIN: Tracers of cosmic expansion with SN IA in the IR |
13050 | Remco van den Bosch, Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie, Heidelberg | The Most Massive Black Holes in Small Galaxies |
13057 | Kailash C. Sahu, Space Telescope Science Institute | Detecting and Measuring the Masses of Isolated Black Holes and Neutron Stars through Astrometric Microlensing |
13064 | David Ehrenreich, Observatoire de Geneve | Investigating the nature of GJ 3470b, the missing link between super-Earths and Neptunes |
13178 | J. Davy Kirkpatrick, California Institute of Technology | Spitzer Trigonometric Parallaxes of the Solar Neighborhood's Coldest Brown Dwarfs |
13181 | Robert P. Kirshner, Harvard University | SN 1987A-- Bridging the Gap for HST's Legacy |
GO 12506:A Precise Mass-Luminosity-Temperature Relation for Young Stars
GO12949: Unveiling the Dusty Universe with the Host Galaxies of Obscured GRBs
GO 12970: Completing the Census of Ultracool Brown Dwarfs in the Solar Neighborhood using HST/WFC3
The stellar menagerie: Sun to Jupiter, via brown dwarfs |
Brown dwarfs are objects that form in the same manner as stars, by gravitational collapse within molecular clouds, but which do not accrete sufficient mass to raise the central temperature above ~2 million Kelvin and ignite hydrogen fusion. As a result, these objects, which have masses less than 0.075 MSun or ~75 M<\sub>Jup, lack a sustained source of energy, and they fade and cool on relatively short astronomical (albeit, long anthropological) timescales. Following their discovery over a decade ago, considerable observational and theoretical attention has focused on the evolution of their intrinsic properties, particularly the details of the atmospheric changes. At their formation, most brown dwarfs have temperatures of ~3,000 to 3,500K, comparable with early-type M dwarfs, but they rapidly cool, with the rate of cooling increasing with decreasing mass. As temperatures drop below ~2,000K, dust condenses within the atmosphere, molecular bands of titanium oxide and vanadium oxide disappear from the spectrum to be replaced by metal hydrides, and the objects are characterised as spectral type L. Below 1,300K, strong methane bands appear in the near-infrared, characteristics of spectral type T. At present, the coolest T dwarfs known have temperatures of ~650 to 700K. At lower temperatures, other species, notably ammonia, are expected to become prominent, and a number of efforts have been undertaken recently to find examples of these "Y" dwarfs. The search is complicated by the fact that such objects are extremely faint instrinsically, so only the nearest will be detectable. Identifying such ultra-ultracool dwarfs was a goal of the WISE satellite mission, which recently completed its all-sky survey. WISE has succeeded in identifying a number of extremely interesting sources, including at least 4 objects that have been confirmed as dwarfs with temperatures lower than 350K. These are among the first examples of Y dwarfs, and all are too faint to be characterised with any degree of certainty using ground-based observations. The current program will use WFC3 G102 grism spectroscopy to verify the nature of a further 20 candidates. |
GO Investigating the nature of GJ 3470b, the missing link between super-Earths and Neptunes