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![]() HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE DAILY REPORT******* # 3397 PERIOD COVERED: DOY 183 OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED NICMOS 8791 NICMOS Post-SAA calibration - CR Persistence Part 2 A new procedure proposed to alleviate the CR-persistence problem of NICMOS. Dark frames will be obtained immediately upon exiting the SAA contour 23, and every time a NICMOS exposure is scheduled within 50 minutes of coming out of the SAA. The darks will be obtained in parallel in all three NICMOS Cameras. The POST-SAA darks will be non-standard reference files available to users with a USEAFTER date/time mark. The keyword 'USEAFTER=date/time' will also be added to the header of each POST-SAA DARK frame. The keyword must be populated with the time, in addition to the date, because HST crosses the SAA ~8 times per day so each POST-SAA DARK will need to have the appropriate time specified, for users to identify the ones they need. Both the raw and processed images will be archived as POST-SAA DARKSs. Generally we expect that all NICMOS science/calibration observations started within 50 minutes of leaving an SAA will need such maps to remove the CR persistence from the science images. Each observation will need its own CRMAP, as different SAA passages leave different imprints on the NICMOS detectors. STIS 9359 The Old Star CS 31082-001, the Age of the Universe, and the Nature of the r-process We propose to observe the newly discovered r-process-element enhanced star, CS 31082-001 {Fe/H ~ -2.9}, in order to determine abundances of the heaviest stable elements, using absorption lines that are only reachable in the near UV. This star is the only halo star for which a uranium detection has been reported, and for which the U/Th chronometer has been used to specify an age limit. In order to improve the accuracy of the age determination from U/Th we require abundance estimates of the daughter nuclides --Pb & Bi-- for which only upper limits have been obtained from ground-based observations. Such estimates will provide crucial constraints on the initial production ratio of U/Th, resulting in a more strict lower limit on the age of this star's progenitor, hence on the age of the Universe. Measurements of 3rd-peak neutron-capture elements, such as Pt, Os, Ir, and Au, all with lines in the 2400-3100 Angstrom range, will expand our knowledge of element synthesis in the early Galaxy. Our recent ESO-VLT data indicate that the neutron-capture elements in this star exhibit different enhancements as compared with the previously known `` r-process star'' CS 22892-052, an apparent anomaly that must be resolved. CS 31082-001 is the ideal HST target in its class -- it is 4-times brighter than CS 22892-052, and less affected by molecular line blending. Consequently, these HST data will become the reference in all future studies of similar stars. ACS/HRC 9379 Near Ultraviolet Imaging of Seyfert Galaxies: Understanding the Starburst-AGN Connection We propose a near-UV snapshot survey of 101 Seyfert galaxies using ACS/HRC and the filter F330W, a configuration which is optimal to detect faint star forming regions around their nuclei. These images will complement optical and near-IR images available in the HST archive, thus providing a panchromatic atlas of the inner regions of active galaxies, which we will use to study the starburst-AGN connection. The main goals of this proposal a {1} Determine the frequency of circumnuclear starbursts in Seyferts, down to levels which cannot be observed from the ground; {2} characterize the observational {fluxes, colors, structure, sizes} and intrinsic {luminosities, masses, ages, global star-formation rate} properties of these clusters; {3} derive the luminosity functions of young star clusters around the nucleus of Seyferts and compare these results with those from normal and starburst galaxies to determine their survival rate close to the AGN; {4} address questions about the relation between AGNs and starbursts, like the possible connection between the masses and luminosities of black holes and starbursts, and the implications for the evolution of the black holes and their host galaxy bulges. By adding UV images to the existing optical and near-IR ones, this project will create an extremely valuable database for astronomers with a broad range of scientific interests, from the properties of the AGN to the properties of their host galaxies. ACS 9454 The Nature of the UV Continuum in LINERs: A Variability Test LINERs may be the most common AGNs, and the signposts of accretion onto the massive black holes present in most galaxies. However, the LINER spectrum is the result of UV excitation, and, in at least some LINERs, a nuclear cluster of hot stars, rather than an AGN, dominates the energetics in the UV. Thus, it is still unknown if the UV continuum, or the optical emission lines it excites, have anything to do with an AGN. The demographics and accretion physics of low-luminosity AGNs hinge on this question. We propose to search for variability in a sample of 17 LINERs with compact UV nuclei. Variability can reveal an AGN component in the UV continuum, even when its light is not dominant. We will test systematically the handful of non-definitive reports of UV variability, and potentially quantify the AGN contribution to the UV emission. Variability in all or most objects will be strong evidence that LINERs mark dormant AGNs in most galaxies. Alternatively, a general null detection of variability will suggest that, even in LINERs with additional AGN signatures, the UV continuum is stellar in origin. Contemporaneous monitoring with the VLA/VLBA of 11 objects which have radio cores {five of which we already know are radio-variable} will reveal the relations between UV and radio variations. The UV-variable objects will be targeted for future, better-sampled, monitoring. ACS 9472 A Snapshot Survey for Gravitational Lenses among z = 4.0 Quasars Over the last few years, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey has revolutionized the study of high-redshift quasars by discovering over 200 objects with redshift greater than 4.0, more than doubling the number known in this redshift interval. The sample includes eight of the ten highest redshift quasars known. We propose a snapshot imaging survey of a well-defined sample of 250 z 4.0 quasars in order to find objects which are gravitationally lensed. Lensing models including magnification bias predict that at least 4% of quasars in a flux-limited sample at z 4 will be multiply lensed. Therefore this survey should find of order 10 lensed quasars at high redshift; only one gravitationally lensed quasar is currently known at z 4. This survey will provide by far the best sample to date of high-redshift gravitational lenses. The observed fraction of lenses can put strong constraints on cosmological models, in particular on the cosmological constant Lambda. In addition, magnification bias can significantly bias estimates of the luminosity function of quasars and the evolution thereof; this work will constrain how important an effect this is, and thereby give us a better understanding of the evolution of quasars and black holes at early epochs, as well as constrain models for black hole formation. ACS 9482 ACS Pure Parallel Lyman-Alpha Emission Survey {APPLES} Ly-alpha line emission is an efficient tool for identifying young galaxies at high redshift, because it is strong in galaxies with young stars and little or no dust --- properties expected in galaxies undergoing their first burst of star- formation. Slitless spectroscopy with the ACS Wide-Field Camera and G800L grism allows an unmatched search efficiency for such objects over the uninterrupted range 4 ~ z ~ 7. We propose the ACS Pure Parallel Ly-alpha Emission Survey {``APPLES''}, to exploit this unique HST capability and so obtain the largest and most uniform sample of high redshift Ly-alpha emitters yet. Parallel observations will allow this survey to be conducted with minimal impact on HST resources, and we will place reduced images and extracted spectra in the public domain within three months of observation. We aim to find ~ 1000 Ly-alpha emitters, 5 times the biggest current sample of Ly-alpha emitters. This unprecedented sample will provide robust statistics on the populations and evolution of Ly-alpha emitters between redshifts 4--7; a robust measurement of the reionization redshift completely independent of the Gunn-Peterson trough; spatial clustering information for Ly-alpha emitters which would let us probe their bias function and hence halo mass as a function of redshift; many galaxies at redshift exceeding 6; and lower redshift serendipitous discoveries. NICMOS 9485 Completing A Near-Infrared Search for Very Low Mass Companions to Stars within 10 pc of the Sun Most stars are fainter and less massive than the Sun. Nevertheless, our knowledge of very low mass {VLM} red dwarfs and their brown dwarf cousins is quite limited. Unknown are the true luminosity function {LF}, multiplicity fraction, mass function, and mass-luminosity relation for red and brown dwarfs, though they dominate the Galaxy in both numbers and total mass. The best way to constrain these relations is a search for faint companions to nearby stars. Such a search has several advantages over field surveys, including greater sensitivity to VLM objects and the availability of precise parallaxes from which luminosities and masses can be derived. We propose to complete our four-filter NICMOS snapshot search for companions to stars within 10 pc. With a 10 sigma detection limit of M_J ~ 20 at 10 pc, we can detect companions between 10 and 100 AU that are at least 9 mag fainter than the empirical end of the main sequence and at least 6.5 mag fainter than the brown dwarf Gl 229B. When completed, our search will be the largest, most sensitive, volume-limited search for VLM companions ever undertaken. Our four-filter search will permit unambiguous identification of VLM-companion candidates for follow-up observation. Together with IR speckle and deep imaging surveys, our program will firmly establish the LF for VLM companions at separations of 1-1000 AU and the multiplicity fraction of all stars within 10 pc. WFPC2 9595 WFPC2 CYCLE 11 SUPPLEMENTAL DARKS pt3/3 This dark calibration program obtains 3 dark frames every day to provide data for monitoring and characterizing the evolution of hot pixels. STIS 9606 CCD Dark Monitor-Part 2 Monitor the darks for the STIS CCD. STIS 9608 CCD Bias Monitor - Part 2 Monitor the bias in the 1x1, 1x2, 2x1, and 2x2 bin settings at gain=1, and 1x1 at gain = 4, to build up high-S/N superbiases and track the evolution of hot columns. ACS 9674 CCD Daily Monitor This program consists of basic tests to monitor, the read noise, the development of hot pixels and test for any source of noise in ACS CCD detectors. This programme will be executed once a day for the entire lifetime of ACS. STIS 9708 STIS Pure Parallel Imaging Program: Cycle 11 This is the default archival pure parallel program for STIS during cycle 11. WFPC2 9709 POMS Test Proposal: WFII parallel archive proposal This is the generic target version of the WFPC2 Archival Pure Parallel program. The program will be used to take parallel images of random areas of the sky, following the recommendations of the 2002 Parallels Working Group. ACS/WFC/HRC 9895 The Role of Groups in the Evolution of Galaxies at Intermediate Redshifts Groups are the most common environment experienced by galaxies, yet they remain the least studied. The tidal fields and dynamical friction encountered by galaxies in groups probably holds the key to understanding the role of environment in driving the evolution of galaxies since z ~ 1. To study the evolution of galaxies in the group environment, we propose the first unbiased HST study of groups at moderate redshifts. Unlike previous HST group samples, that relied on radio or X-ray properties, our kinematically selected sample is drawn from a large redshift survey and is not biased towards unusually dense groups. HST imaging is essential to determine the morphology of galaxies in these systems and contrast this with the properties of galaxies in denser and more evolved groups and rich clusters at these epochs. HST data are also required to adequately compare the properties of groups at intermediate redshifts with local group samples derived from the 2df and Sloan surveys. We will combine the HST images with deep ground-based observations to study how morphologies and stellar populations of galaxies in groups have evolved in time. These observations are key to understanding the decline in the volume averaged star formation rate in the universe. ACS 9984 Cosmic Shear With ACS Pure Parallels Small distortions in the shapes of background galaxies by foreground mass provide a powerful method of directly measuring the amount and distribution of dark matter. Several groups have recently detected this weak lensing by large-scale structure, also called cosmic shear. The high resolution and sensitivity of HST/ACS provide a unique opportunity to measure cosmic shear accurately on small scales. Using 260 parallel orbits in Sloan textiti {F775W} we will measure for the first time: beginlistosetlength sep0cm setlengthemsep0cm setlength opsep0cm em the cosmic shear variance on scales 0.7 arcmin, em the skewness of the shear distribution, and em the magnification effect. endlist Our measurements will determine the amplitude of the mass power spectrum sigma_8Omega_m^0.5, with signal-to-noise {s/n} ~ 20, and the mass density Omega_m with s/n=4. They will be done at small angular scales where non-linear effects dominate the power spectrum, providing a test of the gravitational instability paradigm for structure formation. Measurements on these scales are not possible from the ground, because of the systematic effects induced by PSF smearing from seeing. Having many independent lines of sight reduces the uncertainty due to cosmic variance, making parallel observations ideal. FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated.) HSTAR 9070:* After review of M_SA174N TC log file on PTAS, found GS Re-acquisition @ 2003.175/01:57Z took two attempts for FGS 2R to achieve FL.* No observations should have been impacted as the re-acquisition was ultimately successful.* During the first FL attempt on FGS 2R, the Stop flag came up ~ 9 seconds into the FL walk down, possibly indicating the FGS had walked off the GS. Under investigation. HSTAR 9071:* After review of M_SA174N TC log file on PTAS, found GS Re-acquisition @ 2003.180/07:40Z took two attempts to achieve FL on FGS 3.* No observations should have been impacted as the re-acquisition was ultimately successful. *During the first FL attempt on FGS 2R, the SSLE and Stop flag came us during the FL walk down.* Under investigation. HSTAR 9072:* GS Re-acquisition (1,3,3) @ 184/01:19:49Z required three attempts to achieve FL on FGS 3 due to SSLE.* This is believed to have caused mnemonics OCSTDFBX (CS TDF Bailout status) to flag "Bailout".* GS Re-acquisition (1,3,3) @ 184/02:55:52Z showed two scan step limit flags @ 184/02:58:28Z and 184/02:59:37Z, GS re-acquisition was ultimately successful on third try.* Re-acquisition @ 184/04:31:54Z did not produce any scan step limit flags.* Re-acquisition @ 184/06:07:57Z occurred while vehicle was LOS, no data available until engineering recorder playback. Under investigation. COMPLETED OPS REQs: None OPS NOTES EXECUTED: 1127-0* Limit Adjustment for CCC K51 to Level 5 Change @ 183/1356z 1118-0* Resubmit: Battery 2 Capacity Test limits @ 183/1506z ********************* SCHEDULED**** SUCCESSFUL*** FAILURE TIMES FGS GSacq************** 11************ 11 FGS REacq************** 07************ 07 FHST Update************ 22************ 22 LOSS of LOCK SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: None |
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