Program Number | Principal Investigator | Program Title |
---|---|---|
13646 | Ryan Foley, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign | Understanding the Progenitor Systems, Explosion Mechanisms, and Cosmological Utility of Type Ia Supernovae |
13665 | Bjoern Benneke, California Institute of Technology | Exploring the Diversity of Exoplanet Atmospheres in the Super-Earth Regime |
13695 | Benne W. Holwerda, Sterrewacht Leiden | STarlight Absorption Reduction through a Survey of Multiple Occulting Galaxies (STARSMOG) |
13753 | John Henry Debes, Space Telescope Science Institute | Pushing to 8 AU in the archetypal protoplanetary disk of TW Hya |
14057 | Fabien Grise, Universite de Strasbourg I | Changes in the X-ray irradiation of an ultraluminous X-ray source |
14068 | Robert Scott Barrows, University of Colorado at Boulder | Resolving the Nuclear Regions of Confirmed Offset AGN |
14071 | Sanchayeeta Borthakur, The Johns Hopkins University | How are HI Disks Fed? Probing Condensation at the Disk-Halo Interface |
14076 | Boris T. Gaensicke, The University of Warwick | An HST legacy ultraviolet spectroscopic survey of the 13pc white dwarf sample |
14103 | Jian-Yang Li, Planetary Science Institute | 1800 |
14123 | James Colbert, Jet Propulsion Laboratory | Does All The Lyman Continuum Emission Escape From Young, Low Mass Starbursts? |
14127 | Michele Fumagalli, Durham Univ. | First Measurement of the Small Scale Structure of Circumgalactic Gas via Grism Spectra of Close Quasar Pairs |
14157 | Kevin Luhman, The Pennsylvania State University | Testing Model Atmospheres with the Coldest Known Brown Dwarf |
14163 | Mickael Rigault, Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin | Honing Type Ia Supernovae as Distance Indicators, Exploiting Environmental Bias for H0 and w. |
14168 | Daniel P. Stark, University of Arizona | COS Views of He II Emitting Star Forming Galaxies: Preparing for the JWST Era |
14178 | Matthew A. Malkan, University of California - Los Angeles | WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey: The WISP Deep Fields |
14181 | S. Thomas Megeath, University of Toledo | A Snapshot WFC3 IR Survey of Spitzer/Hershel-Identified Protostars in Nearby Molecular Clouds |
14190 | Nuria Calvet, University of Michigan | Trickles of Accretion: Catching a Final Glimpse of Gas in the Disk |
14199 | Patrick Kelly, University of California - Berkeley | Refsdal Redux: Precise Measurements of the Reappearance of the First Supernova with Multiple Resolved Images |
14204 | Antonino Paolo Milone, Australian National University | Multiple stellar populations in two young Large Magellanic Cloud clusters: NGC1755 and NGC1866 |
14206 | Adam Riess, The Johns Hopkins University | A New Threshold of Precision, 30 micro-arcsecond Parallaxes and Beyond |
14232 | Ian U. Roederer, University of Michigan | STIS Observations of Metal-Poor Stars: Direct Confrontation with Nucleosynthetic Predictions |
14233 | Adam Schneider, University of Toledo | Taming the Tepid Three |
14277 | John T. Stocke, University of Colorado at Boulder | Probing Hot Gas in Spiral-Rich Galaxy Groups |
14327 | Saul Perlmutter, University of California - Berkeley | See Change: Testing time-varying dark energy with z>1 supernovae and their massive cluster hosts |
14340 | Alexandre Gallenne, Universidad de Concepcion | Accurate masses and distances of the binary Cepheids S Mus and SU Cyg |
14453 | Diana Dragomir, University of Chicago | The Nature of 55 Cancri e |
14465 | Jonathan Charles Tan, University of Florida | Peering to the Heart of Massive Star Birth |
14474 | David Jewitt, University of California - Los Angeles | Comet P/2010 V1 fragmentation event |
GO 14157: Testing Model Atmospheres with the Coldest Known Brown Dwarf
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 MJup, 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 completed an all-sky survey in 2011 (and is currently being employed in a search for Near-Earth Objects, NEOWISE). WISE has identified several Y dwarfs, including several with temperatures lower than 350K. The most interesting source was discovered by Kevin Luhman (Penn State), WISE0855-071, a brown dwarf lying only 2.2 parsecs from the Sun with a surface temperature around 250 K. The object is extremelty faint and is detectable only by virtue of its proximity. Previously, Hubble obtained J-band imaging with the F110W filter on WFC3-IR; the present program aims add detections in the far red (F850LP) with ACS and near-infrared (F105W and F127M) with WFC3-IR. |
GO 14163: Honing Type Ia Supernovae as Distance Indicators, Exploiting Environmental Bias for H0 and w.
GO 14199: Refsdal Redux: Precise Measurements of the Reappearance of the First Supernova with Multiple Resolved Image
GO 14474: Comet P/2010 V1 fragmentation event