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Daily 3710
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE - Continuing to collect World Class Science
DAILY REPORT # 3710 PERIOD COVERED: DOY 279 OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED ACS/HRC 10377 ACS Earth Flats High signal sky flats will be obtained by observing the bright Earth with the HRC and WFC. These observations will be used to verify the accuracy of the flats currently used by the pipeline and will provide a comparison with flats derived via other techniques: L-flats from stellar observations, sky flats from stacked GO observations, and internal flats using the calibration lamps. Weekly coronagraphic monitoring is required to assess the changing position of the spots. ACS/WFC 10178 Imaging Polarimetry of Young Stellar Objects with ACS and NICMOS: A study in dust grain evolution The formation of planetary systems is intimately linked to the dust population in circumstellar disks, thus understanding dust grain evolution is essential to advancing our understanding of how planets form. By combining {1} the high resolution polarimetric capabilities of ACS and NICMOS, {2} powerful 3-D radiative transfer codes, and {3} observations of objects known to span the earliest stellar evolutionary phases, we will gain crucial insight into the initial phases of dust grain growth: evolution away from an ISM distribution. Fractional polarization is a strong function of wavelength, therefore by comparing polarimetric images in the optical and infrared, we can sensitively constrain not only the geometry and optical depth of the scattering medium, but also the grain size distribution. By observing objects representative of the earliest evolutionary sequence of YSOs, we will be able to investigate how the dust population evolves in size and distribution during the crucial transition from a disk+envelope system to a disk+star system. The proposed study will help to establish the fundamental time scales for the initial depletion of ISM-like grains: the first step in understanding the transformation from small submicron sized dust grains, to large millimeter sized grains, and untimely to planetary bodies. ACS/WFC 10216 Co-evolution of spheroids and black holes The masses of the giant black holes in galaxies are correlated with the luminosities, masses, and velocity dispersions of their host spheroids. This empirical connection of phenomena on widely different scales {from sub-parsec to kiloparsec} suggests that the evolution of a galaxy and its central black hole are closely linked. We propose to test various unified formation models, by measuring the cosmic evolution of the black hole/spheroid relations, back to z=0.37 {a lookback time of 4 Gyrs}. We will obtain 1-orbit ACS images of a sample of 20 Seyfert 1 galaxies, for which we already have extensive new ground-based measures of the black hole masses and the stellar velocity dispersions. HST resolution is required for accurate measurement of the nonstellar AGN continuum, and the luminosity and effective radius of the bulge of each host galaxy. This will complete the set of observables needed to map the co-evolution of spheroids and black-holes. The proposed sample is the minimum required to make the first measure of the black hole mass/bulge correlation and of the fundamental plane for active galaxies outside the local Universe. ACS/WFC 9860 ESSENCE: Measuring the Dark Energy Equation of State The accelerating universe appears to be dominated by a dark energy with a significant negative pressure. The ratio of the pressure to density of this mysterious energy {its equation of state} is an observable which can differentiate between the proliferating candidate theories. We propose to estimate the dark energy equation of state by observing Type Ia supernovae at redshifts near z=0.7 with HST in concert with the on-going ESSENCE NOAO Survey program that is discovering and studying supernovae between 0.3z0.8. We show that an interesting constraint on the equation of state can be made with supernovae observed at modest redshifts given the current knowledge of the matter density. We will follow 10 Type Ia supernovae discovered from the ground and passed to HST without disrupting its schedule. The full data set will constrain the equation of state to 10% and strictly limit the range of possible dark energy models. In keeping with the ESSENCE policy, these observations will available to the community immediately. FGS 10106 An Astrometric Calibration of the Cepheid Period-Luminosity Relation We propose to measure the parallaxes of 10 Galactic Cepheid variables. When these parallaxes {with 1-sigma precisions of 10% or better} are added to our recent HST FGS parallax determination of delta Cep {Benedict et al 2002}, we anticipate determining the Period-Luminosity relation zero point with a 0.03 mag precision. In addition to permitting the test of assumptions that enter into other Cepheid distance determination techniques, this calibration will reintroduce Galactic Cepheids as a fundamental step in the extragalactic distance scale ladder. A Period-Luminosity relation derived from solar metallicity Cepheids can be applied directly to extragalactic solar metallicity Cepheids, removing the need to bridge with the Large Magellanic Cloud and its associated metallicity complications. FGS 10107 The Masses of the O-type Binary 15 Monocerotis The O-type star 15 Mon {HD 47839} was recently discovered to be an astrometric and spectroscopic binary with a period of 25 years; it is the first known O-star system to bridge the observational gap between the period regimes normally probed by these techniques. An analysis of both the radial velocity curve and astrometric orbit yields the masses of the components and distance to the system. Continuing radial velocity and HST/FGS astrometric measurements will lead to a definitive orbit and yield key information about the masses of O-type stars. FGS TRANS mode measurements of separation, position angle, and magnitude difference {begun in Cycle 5} are needed to link existing speckle observations and anticipated observations with the CHARA Array optical interferometer. In addition, field astrometry measurements {FGS POS mode} will provide the proper motion, parallax, and the binary motion around the center of mass. The POS data will provide an accurate estimate of the mass ratio and an improved estimate of distance, and taken together with the spectroscopic and astrometric orbital data, we will obtain masses for both components accurate to a few percent. 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" to 0.325". 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 attempt 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/NIC2/NIC3 8793 NICMOS Post-SAA calibration - CR Persistence Part 4 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. 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. WFPC2 10360 WFPC2 CYCLE 13 INTERNAL MONITOR This calibration proposal is the Cycle 13 routine internal monitor for WFPC2, to be run weekly to monitor the health of the cameras. A variety of internal exposures are obtained in order to provide a monitor of the integrity of the CCD camera electronics in both bays {gain 7 and gain 15}, a test for quantum efficiency in the CCDs, and a monitor for possible buildup of contaminants on the CCD windows. WFPC2 10363 WFPC2 CYCLE 13 Intflat and Visflat Sweeps and Filter Rotation Anomaly Monitor Using intflat observations, this WFPC2 proposal is designed to monitor the pixel-to-pixel flatfield response and provide a linearity check. The intflat sequences, to be done once during the year, are similar to those from the Cycle 12 program 10075. The images will provide a backup database in the event of complete failure of the visflat lamp as well as allow monitoring of the gain ratios. The sweep is a complete set of internal flats, cycling through both shutter blades and both gains. The linearity test consists of a series of intflats in F555W, in each gain and each shutter. As in Cycle 12, we plan to continue to take extra visflat, intflat, and earthflat exposures to test the repeatability of filter wheel motions. FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated.) HSTAR 9553: Both of a pair of FHST Updates (U1,3FM) @ 279/20:24:13Z and 20:26:58Z failed with Error Box results indicating "1 FAILED". Two 486 Status Buffer message were observed, first @ 279/20:25:02Z. Subsequent GS Acquisition (2,3,2) was successful. Under investigation. COMPLETED OPS REQs: None OPS NOTES EXECUTED: None SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL FAILURE TIMES FGS Gsacq 12 12 FGS Reacq 5 5 FHST Update 18 16 279/2024z and 279/2026z (HSTAR 9553) LOSS of LOCK SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: None |
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