Program Number | Principal Investigator | Program Title |
---|---|---|
13347 | Joel N. Bregman, University of Michigan | The Missing Baryons Around Nearby Dwarf Galaxies |
13375 | Dougal Mackey, Australian National University | Deep photometry of two accreted families of globular clusters in the remote M31 halo |
13395 | Theodore R. Gull, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center | Constraining the evolutionary state of the hot, massive companion star and the wind-wind collision region in Eta Carinae |
13459 | Tommaso L. Treu, University of California - Los Angeles | The Grism Lens-Amplified Survey from Space {GLASS} |
13504 | Jennifer Lotz, Space Telescope Science Institute | HST Frontier Fields - Observations of MACSJ1149.5+2223 |
13517 | Matthew A. Malkan, University of California - Los Angeles | WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey WISP: A Survey of Star Formation Across Cosmic Time |
13640 | Esther Buenzli, Max-Planck-Institut fur Astronomie, Heidelberg | A direct probe of cloud holes at the L/T transition |
13645 | Xiaohui Fan, University of Arizona | Galactic Environment of A Twenty-Billion Solar-Mass Black Hole at the End of Reionization |
13657 | Jeyhan Kartaltepe, National Optical Astronomy Observatory, AURA | Probing the Most Luminous Galaxies in the Universe at the Peak of Galaxy Assembly |
13677 | Saul Perlmutter, University of California - Berkeley | See Change: Testing time-varying dark energy with z>1 supernovae and their massive cluster hosts |
13679 | Lorenz Roth, Southwest Research Institute | Europa's Water Vapor Plumes: Systematically Constraining their Abundance and Variability |
13683 | Schuyler D. Van Dyk, California Institute of Technology | The Stellar Origins of Supernovae |
13715 | Jennifer Sokoloski, Columbia University in the City of New York | Imaging Spectroscopy of the Gamma-Ray Nova V959 Mon |
13760 | Derck L. Massa, Space Science Institute | Filling the gap --near UV, optical and near IR extinction |
13761 | Stephan Robert McCandliss, The Johns Hopkins University | High efficiency SNAP survey for Lyman alpha emitters at low redshift |
13774 | Sara Ellison, University of Victoria | Feeding and feeback: The impact of AGN on the circumgalactic medium. |
13776 | Michael D. Gregg, University of California - Davis | Completing The Next Generation Spectral Library |
13791 | Nathan Smith, University of Arizona | A Time-Lapse Movie of the Kinematics Across the Carina Nebula with ACS |
13793 | Rebecca A A Bowler, Royal Observatory Edinburgh | Unveiling the merger fraction, sizes and morphologies of the brightest z ~ 7 galaxies |
13841 | Alexandre Gallenne, Universidad de Concepcion | Accurate masses and distances of the binary Cepheids S Mus and SU Cyg |
13863 | Dean C. Hines, Space Telescope Science Institute | Imaging Polarimetry of the 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko with ACS: Supporting the Rosetta Mission |
13866 | David Jewitt, University of California - Los Angeles | Determining the Nature and Origin of Mass Loss from Active Asteroid P/2013 P5 |
13868 | Dale D. Kocevski, Colby College | Are Compton-Thick AGN the Missing Link Between Mergers and Black Hole Growth? |
13928 | Adam Riess, The Johns Hopkins University | HST and Gaia, Light and Distance |
14036 | Laurent Lamy, Observatoire de Paris - Section de Meudon | Post-equinox Uranus aurorae during a strong magnetosphere-solar wind shock interaction |
GO 13503: HST Frontier Fields - Observations of MACSJ1149.5+2223
GO 13640: A direct probe of cloud holes at the L/T transition
GO 13866: Determining the Nature and Origin of Mass Loss from Active Asteroid P/2013 R3
GO 13928: HST and Gaia, Light and Distance
HST WFPC2 image of NGC 4639, one of the Cepheid-rich spiral galaxies used to calibrate SNe Ia |
The cosmic distance scale and dark energy are two key issues in modern astrophysics, and HST has played a vital role in probing both. On the one hand, HST has been involved in cosmic distance measurements since its inception, largely through the H0 Key Project, which used WFPC2 to identify and photometer Cepheids in 31 spiral galaxies at distances from 60 to 400 Mpc. On the other, HST is the prime instrument for investigating cosmic acceleration by searching for and following Type Ia supernovae at moderate and high redshift. These two cosmological parameters are directly related, and recent years have seen renewed interest in improving the accuracy of H0 with the realization that such measurements, when coupled with the improved constraints from the Cosmic Microwave Background, provide important constraints on cosmic acceleration and the nature of Dark Energy. Previous HST programs have focused on identifying and measuring light curves for cepheids in external galaxies (eg GO 10802 , GO 11570 ) or quantifying the effects of variations in intrinsic stellar parameters, such as metallicity (eg GO 10918 , GO 11297 ). The present SNAP program is part of a suite of HST programs focusing on the Galactic Cepheids that form the foundation for the whole distance ladder. These programs employ a revived version of an old technique to determine both accurate astrometry, hence trigonometric parallaxes and reliable distances, and accurate photometry, hence flux emasurements. The technique is drift-scanning - tracking HST during the observation so that stars form trails on the detector. This mode of observations was available in the early years of HST's operations, and has been revived primarily as a means of obtaining high signal-to-noise grism spectroscolpic data of stars hosting transiting exoplanets. However, the same technique can be used in imaging mode, and the extended trails allow not only multiple measurements of position differences for stars in the field but also extremely high signal-to-noise photometry. The latter is crucial in obtaining direct photometry of tghe local calibrations on the same HST system, the same system that is being used for photometry of Cephids in the external galaxies that serve as the basis for the distance scale. The present SNAP program includes 67 longer-period Galactic Cepheids. |