Program Number | Principal Investigator | Program Title |
---|---|---|
14066 | Angela Adamo, Stockholm University | Hi-PEEC, Hubble imaging Probe of Extreme Environments and Clusters |
14069 | Nate Bastian, Liverpool John Moores University | Searching For Multiple Populations in Massive Young and Intermediate Age Clusters |
14076 | Boris T. Gaensicke, The University of Warwick | An HST legacy ultraviolet spectroscopic survey of the 13pc white dwarf sample |
14096 | Dan Coe, Space Telescope Science Institute - ESA | RELICS: Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey |
14104 | Jesus Maiz Apellaniz, Centro de Astrobiologia (CAB, CSIC-INTA) | The optical-UV extinction law in 30 Doradus |
14160 | John M. O'Meara, Saint Michaels College | A 100 million-fold increase in the measured sizes of neutral gas reservoirs in the early Universe |
14163 | Mickael Rigault, Humboldt Universitat zu Berlin | Honing Type Ia Supernovae as Distance Indicators, Exploiting Environmental Bias for H0 and w. |
14164 | Ata Sarajedini, University of Florida | Exploring the nature and synchronicity of early cluster formation in the Local Group |
14170 | Eva Wuyts, Max-Planck-Institut fur extraterrestrische Physik | A Complete Census: Mapping the Lya Emission and Stellar Continuum in a Lensed Main-Sequence Galaxy at z=2.39 Hosting an AGN-driven Nuclear Outflow |
14178 | Matthew A. Malkan, University of California - Los Angeles | WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey: The WISP Deep Fields |
14182 | Thomas H. Puzia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile | The Coma Cluster Core Project |
14216 | Robert P. Kirshner, Harvard University | RAISIN2: Tracers of cosmic expansion with SN IA in the IR |
14219 | John P. Blakeslee, Dominion Astrophysical Observatory | Homogeneous Distances and Central Profiles for MASSIVE Survey Galaxies with Supermassive Black Holes |
14236 | Sangmo Tony Sohn, Space Telescope Science Institute | The First Proper Motions of Ultra-faint Dwarf Galaxies: Probing Reionization and Planar Associations of Satellites |
14259 | Denija Crnojevic, Texas Tech University | Resolved halo substructures beyond the Local Group: the assembly histories of NGC 253 and NGC 5128 |
14353 | Andrew S. Fruchter, Space Telescope Science Institute | The Astrophysics of the Most Energetic Gamma-Ray Bursts |
14497 | Renske Smit, Durham Univ. | Identifying z>12 galaxies with JWST: What sources produce strong UV emission lines? |
14594 | Rich Bielby, Durham Univ. | QSAGE: QSO Sightline And Galaxy Evolution |
14606 | Brooke Devlin Simmons, University of California - San Diego | Secular Black Hole Growth and Feedback in Merger-Free Galaxies |
14611 | Or Graur, Harvard University | Going gently into the night: constraining Type Ia supernova nucleosynthesis using late-time photometry |
14618 | Michael Shara, American Museum of Natural History | Ultraviolet Flashers in M87: Rapidly Recurring Novae as SNIa Progenitors |
14625 | Gilda E. Ballester, University of Arizona | Connecting the lower and upper atmospheres of a warm-Neptune. Implications for planetary evolution. |
14632 | Dawn K. Erb, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee | Lyman-alpha Imaging at ~20 pc Resolution in a Low Mass Lensed Galaxy at z=1.85 |
14648 | Adam Riess, The Johns Hopkins University | A New Threshold of Precision, 30 micro-arcsecond Parallaxes and Beyond |
14654 | Peter Milne, University of Arizona | A Second Ladder: Testing for Bias in the Type Ia Distance Scale with SBF |
14677 | Tim Schrabback, Universitat Bonn, Argelander Institute for Astronomy | Probing the most distant high-mass galaxy clusters from SPT with HST weak lensing observations |
14704 | Charlie Conroy, Harvard University | A Year in the Whirlpool |
14707 | Philip Louis Massey, Lowell Observatory | Searching for the Most Massive Stars in M31 and M33 |
14732 | James Andrew Hogg, University of Maryland | 2MASS J00423991+3017515: An AGN On The Run? |
14733 | Luke Hovey, Los Alamos National Laboratory | Single-Degenerate or Double-Degenerate? The Case for a Third Epoch Observation of the Confirmed Ia Supernova Remnant 0509-67.5 |
14734 | Nitya Kallivayalil, The University of Virginia | Milky Way Cosmology: Laying the Foundation for Full 6-D Dynamical Mapping of the Nearby Universe |
14762 | Justyn Robert Maund, University of Sheffield | A UV census of the sites of core-collapse supernovae |
14766 | Joshua D. Simon, Carnegie Institution of Washington | ACS Imaging of the Ultra-Faint Dwarf Galaxy Reticulum II: Age-Dating a Unique Nucleosynthetic Event |
14767 | David Kent Sing, University of Exeter | The Panchromatic Comparative Exoplanetary Treasury Program |
14793 | Jacob L. Bean, University of Chicago | The First Precise Atmospheric Metallicity Measurement for a Sub-Jovian Exoplanet |
14840 | Andrea Bellini, Space Telescope Science Institute | Schedule Gap Pilot |
14862 | Ariel Goobar, Stockholm University | Resolving the multiple images of the strongly lensed SNIa iPTF16geu |
14864 | Jessica Agarwal, Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research | Tracing rotational fission in the first known active binary asteroid system 288P/300163 |
GO 14069: Searching For Multiple Populations in Massive Young and Intermediate Age Clusters
HST image of the LMC cluster, NGC 1866 |
Globular clusters are remnants of the first substantial burst of star formation in the Milky Way. With typical masses of a few x 105 solar masses, distributed among several x 106 stars, the standard picture holds that these are simple systems, where all the stars formed in a single starburst and, as a consequence, have the same age and metallicity. Until recently, the only known exception to this rule was the cluster Omega Centauri, which is significantly more massive than most clusters and has both double main sequence and a range of metallicities among the evolved stars. Over the past 5-10 years, Omega Cen has been joined by numerous other Galactic clusters, including NGC 2808, which shows evidence for three distinct branches to the main sequence, NGC 1851, 47 Tucanae and NGC 6752 - all relatively massive clusters. In almost all cases, the complexity of these systems has only emerged through the high precision observations possible with HST. Hubble is now being turned towards clusters in our nearest neighbour galaxies, the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds. Previousl observations have obtained of the massive cluster NGC 1846. The present program aims to extends coverage to a dozen other clusters, including NGC 419, 1783, 1850 and 1866. The clusters span a wide range of ages, from ~100 Myrs to close to 10 Gyrs. The WFC3-UVIS camera will be used to obtain UV (F343N, F336W) and blue-band (F438W) images to search for evidence of multiple populations in the colour-magnitude diagrams. |
GO 14497: Identifying z>12 galaxies with JWST: What sources produce strong UV emission lines?
GO 14767: The Panchromatic Comparative Exoplanetary Treasury Program