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Daily 3748
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT # 3748 PERIOD COVERED: DOY 337 OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED ACS/HRC 10137 Cluster Archeology: The Origin of Ultra-compact Dwarf Galaxies Ultra-compact dwarf {UCD} galaxies are a new type of galaxy we have discovered in the central regions of the Fornax and Virgo galaxy clusters. Our most recent observations in the Fornax Cluster show that UCDs outnumber normal galaxies in the centre of that cluster. Here we propose snapshot imaging of UCDs in the Fornax and Virgo clusters to test theories of how these fascinating objects formed. In particular we wish to image Virgo cluster UCDs for which we have ground-based Keck spectroscopy to test predictions that they formed more recently than the Fornax UCDs. ACS/HRC 10376 ACS Internal Flat Field Stability The stability of the CCD flat fields will be monitored using the calibration lamps and a sub-sample of the filter set. High signal observations will be used to assess the stability of the pixel-to- pixel flat field structure and to monitor the position of the dust motes. Only internal exposures with the calibration lamps will be required. ACS/HRC/WFC 10370 CCD Hot Pixel Annealing Hot pixel annealing will continue to be performed once every 4 weeks. The CCD TECs will be turned off and heaters will be activated to bring the detector temperatures to about +20C. This state will be held for approximately 12 hours, after which the heaters are turned off, the TECs turned on, and the CCDs returned to normal operating condition. To assess the effectiveness of the annealing, a bias and four dark images will be taken before and after the annealing procedure for both WFC and HRC. The HRC darks are taken in parallel with the WFC darks. The charge transfer efficiency {CTE} of the ACS CCD detectors declines as damage due to on-orbit radiation exposure accumulates. This degradation has been closely monitored at regular intervals, because it is likely to determine the useful lifetime of the CCDs. We will now combine the annealing activity with the charge transfer efficiency monitoring and also merge into the routine dark image collection. To this end, the CTE monitoring exposures have been moved into this proposal . All the data for this program is acquired using internal targets {lamps} only, so all of the exposures should be taken during Earth occultation time {but not during SAA passages}. This program emulates the ACS pre-flight ground calibration and post-launch SMOV testing {program 8948}, so that results from each epoch can be directly compared. Extended Pixel Edge Response {EPER} and First Pixel Response {FPR} data will be obtained over a range of signal levels for both the Wide Field Channel {WFC}, and the High Resolution Channel {HRC}. ACS/WFC/WFPC2 10092 The COSMOS 2-Degree ACS Survey We will undertake a 2 square degree imaging survey {Cosmic Evolution Survey -- COSMOS} with ACS in the I {F814W} band of the VIMOS equatorial field. This wide field survey is essential to understand the interplay between Large Scale Structure {LSS} evolution and the formation of galaxies, dark matter and AGNs and is the one region of parameter space completely unexplored at present by HST. The equatorial field was selected for its accessibility to all ground-based telescopes and low IR background and because it will eventually contain ~100, 000 galaxy spectra from the VLT-VIMOS instrument. The imaging will detect over 2 million objects with I 27 mag {AB, 10 sigma}, over 35, 000 Lyman Break Galaxies {LBGs} and extremely red galaxies out to z ~ 5. COSMOS is the only HST project specifically designed to probe the formation and evolution of structures ranging from galaxies up to Coma-size clusters in the epoch of peak galaxy, AGN, star and cluster formation {z ~0.5 to 3}. The size of the largest structures necessitate the 2 degree field. Our team is committed to the assembly of several public ancillary datasets including the optical spectra, deep XMM and VLA imaging, ground-based optical/IR imaging, UV imaging from GALEX and IR data from SIRTF. Combining the full-spectrum multiwavelength imaging and spectroscopic coverage with ACS sub-kpc resolution, COSMOS will be Hubble's ultimate legacy for understanding the evolution of both the visible and dark universe. FGS 10202 Resolving OB Binaries in the Carina Nebula, Resuming the Survey In March 2002 we carried out a small, high-angular resolution survey of some of the brightest OB stars in the Carina Nebula with FGS1r in an attempt to resolve binary systems which had thus far evaded detection by other techniques. Of 23 stars observed, 5 new OB binaries were discovered with component separations ranging from 0.015" to0.325". This yield over the spatial domain of FGS1r's angular resolution, coupled with published statistics of the incidence of OB stars in short-period spectroscopic, and long-period visual binaries suggests that the fraction of binarity or multiplicity among OB stars is near unity. Our unexpected resolution of the prototype O2 If* star HD 93129A as a 55 milli-arcsecond double is a case in point that great care must be exercised when one attempts to establish the IMF and upper-mass cuttoff at the high-mass end of the HR diagram. We propose to resume the survey to observe a larger, statistically meaningful sample of OB stars to establish a firm assessment of multiplicity at the high-mass end of the IMF in these clusters. We will also investigate the single- star/binary-star status of several astrophysically important, individual stars in order to enable a better understanding of the evolution of high-mass stars. NIC1 10143 Ultracool companions to the nearest L dwarfs We propose to conduct the most sensitive survey to date for low mass companions to nearby L dwarfs. We will use NICMOS to image targets drawn from a volume-complete sample of 70 L dwarfs within 20 parsecs. The combination of infrared imaging and proximity will allow us to search for T dwarf companions at separations as small as 1.6 AU. This is crucial, since no ultracool binaries are currently known with separations exceeding 15 AU. Only 10 dwarfs in this sample have previous HST observations primarily at optical wavelengths. With the increased sensitivity of our survey, we will provide the most stringent test to date of brown dwarf models which envisage formation as ejected stellar embryos. In addition, our observations will be capable of detecting binaries with mass ratios as low as 0.3, and will therefore also test the apparent preference for equal-mass ultracool binaries. Finally, our observations offer the best prospect to date of detecting companions significantly cooler than the coolest t dwarf currently known. NIC1 10208 NICMOS Differential Imaging Search for Planetary Mass Companions to Nearby Young Brown Dwarfs We propose to use the differential spectral imaging capability of HST/NICMOS {NIC1} to search for planetary mass companions. We target the twelve most nearby {within 30 pc}, isolated {no known close companion}, and young { 1Gyr} brown dwarfs. All of them have spectral type L and show signs of Lithium absorption, which clearly proves their substellar nature and youth. Planetary mass companions with masses down to 6 Jupiter masses, and at separations larger than 3 A.U. are bright enough for a direct detection with HST/NICMOS using the spectral differential imaging technique in two narrow-band filters placed on and off molecular bands. The proposed project has the potential to lead to the first direct detection of a planetary mass object in orbit around a nearby brown dwarf. NIC1/NIC2/NIC3 8794 NICMOS Post-SAA calibration - CR Persistence Part 5 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. NIC2 10176 Coronagraphic Survey for Giant Planets Around Nearby Young Stars A systematic imaging search for extra-solar Jovian planets is now possible thanks to recent progress in identifying "young stars near Earth". For most of the proposed young {~ 30 Myrs} and nearby {~ 60 pc} targets, we can detect a few Jupiter-mass planets as close as a few tens of AUs from the primary stars. This represents the first time that potential analogs of our solar system - that is planetary systems with giant planets having semi-major axes comparable to those of the four giant planets of the Solar System - come within the grasp of existing instrumentation. Our proposed targets have not been observed for planets with the Hubble Space Telescope previously. Considering the very successful earlier NICMOS observations of low mass brown dwarfs and planetary disks among members of the TW Hydrae Association, a fair fraction of our targets should also turn out to posses low mass brown dwarfs, giant planets, or dusty planetary disks because our targets are similar to {or even better than} the TW Hydrae stars in terms of youth and proximity to Earth. Should HST time be awarded and planetary mass candidates be found, proper motion follow-up of candidate planets will be done with ground-based AOs. NIC2 10177 Solar Systems In Formation: A NICMOS Coronagraphic Survey of Protoplanetary and Debris Disks Until recently, despite decades of concerted effort applied to understanding the formation processes that gave birth to our solar system, the detailed morphology of circumstellar material that must eventually form planets has been virtually impossible to discern. The advent of high contrast, coronagraphic imaging as implemented with the instruments aboard HST has dramatically enhanced our understanding of natal planetary system formation. Even so, only a handful of evolved disks {~ 1 Myr and older} have been imaged and spatially resolved in light scattered from their constituent grains. To elucidate the physical processes and properties in potentially planet-forming circumstellar disks, and to understand the nature and evolution of their grains, a larger spatially resolved and photometrically reliable sample of such systems must be observed. Thus, we propose a highly sensitive circumstellar disk imaging survey of a well-defined and carefully selected sample of YSOs {1-10 Myr T Tau and HAeBe stars} and { app 10 Myr} main sequence stars, to probe the posited epoch of planetary system formation, and to provide this critically needed imagery. Our resolved images will shed light on the spatial distributions of the dust in these thermally emissive disks. In combination with their long wavelength SEDs the physical properties of the grains will be discerned, or constrained by our photometrically accurate surface brightness sensitivity limits for faint disks which elude detection. Our sample builds on the success of the exploratory GTO 7233 program, using two-roll per orbit PSF-subtracted NICMOS coronagraphy to provide the highest detection sensitivity to the smallest disks around bright stars which can be imaged with HST. Our sample will discriminate between proposed evolutionary scenarios while providing a legacy of cataloged morphologies for interpreting mid- and far-IR SEDs that the recently launched Spitzer Space Telescope will deliver. NIC3 9846 The Origins of Sub-stellar Masses: Searching for the End of the IMF Is there a preferred scale that defines the end of the IMF? We propose to test this hypothesis by conducting a deep spectroscopic survey of extremely low mass objects in the embedded young cluster associated with NGC1333. At a distance of only 300pc, this cluster is one of the nearest examples of a dense young cluster. We will be able to obtain R=200 spectra and photometry for 40-60 cluster members with masses between 5-40 Jupiter masses at an age of 1 Myr observed through A{v}10 mag. This will enable us to estimate temperatures and luminosities for all sources detected in the survey. We will compare their positions in an H-R diagram to PMS evolutionary tracks in order to estimate their ages and masses. For a solar metallicity cloud at a temperature of 10 K, the minimum mass for fragmentation is thought to be 10 Jupiter masses. A statistically significant sample of objects detected below this limit would challenge the role of hierarchical fragmentation in limiting substellar masses. The proximity of this cluster combined with the unique sensitivity, wavelength coverage, and multi-object spectroscopic capability of NICMOS on HST make this experiment possible. FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated.) HSTAR 9616: GS Acquisition (2,1,2) @ 337/14:11:32Z resulted in FL backup (2,0,2) using FGS 2 due to SSLE on FGS 1 after multiple attempts. Prior FHST FM Updates @ 337/14:06:02Z and 14:08:47Z showed good attitude error vector. Subsequent FHST Map @ 337/14:19:48Z showed 3-axis (RSS) value ~ 5.000 arcsec. Subsequent GS Reacquisition (2,1,2) @ 337/15:11:59Z resulted in FL backup (2,0,2). Under investigation. COMPLETED OPS REQs: 17336-0 Null Genslews for Proposal 10398 Slots 10,11,12 (No Commanding Needed) @337/2335z OPS NOTES EXECUTED: 1291-0 486 FSW Load Clean-up Post FSW 2.6C Install @337/1757z SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL FAILURE TIMES FGS Gsacq 9 9 FGS Reacq 7 7 FHST Update 11 11 LOSS of LOCK SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: None |
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