NASA Hubble Space Telescope Daily Report #4438

Notice: Due to the conversion of some ACS WFC or HRC observations into WFPC2, or NICMOS observations after the loss of ACS CCD science capability in January, there may be an occasional discrepancy between a proposal’s listed (and correct) instrument usage and the abstract that follows it.
HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE DAILY REPORT # 4438
– Continuing to collect World Class Science
PERIOD COVERED: UT August 30, 2007 (DOY 242)
OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED
FGS 11211
An Astrometric Calibration of Population II Distance Indicators In 2002 HST produced a highly precise parallax for RR Lyrae. That measurement resulted in an absolute magnitude, M{V}= 0.61+/-0.11, a useful result, judged by the over ten refereed citations each year since. It is, however, unsatisfactory to have the direct, parallax-based, distance scale of Population II variables based on a single star. We propose, therefore, to obtain the parallaxes of four additional RR Lyrae stars and two Population II Cepheids, or W Vir stars. The Population II Cepheids lie with the RR Lyrae stars on a common K-band Period-Luminosity relation. Using these parallaxes to inform that relationship, we anticipate a zero-point error of 0.04 magnitude. This result should greatly strengthen confidence in the Population II distance scale and increase our understanding of RR Lyrae star and Pop II Cepheid astrophysics.
FGS 11212
Filling the Period Gap for Massive Binaries
The current census of binaries among the massive O-type stars is seriously incomplete for systems in the period range from years to millennia because the radial velocity variations are too small and the angular separations too close for easy detection. Here we propose to discover binaries in this observational gap through a Faint Guidance Sensor SNAP survey of relatively bright targets listed in the Galactic O Star Catalog. Our primary goal is to determine the binary frequency among those in the cluster/association, field, and runaway groups. The results will help us assess the role of binaries in massive star formation and in the processes that lead to the ejection of massive stars from their natal clusters. The program will also lead to the identification of new, close binaries that will be targets of long term spectroscopic and high angular resolution observations to determine their masses and distances. The results will also be important for the interpretation of the spectra of suspected and newly identified binary and multiple systems.
NIC1/NIC2 11172
Defining Classes of Long Period Variable Stars in M31
We propose a thrifty but information-packed investigation {1440 exposures total} with NICMOS F205W, F160W and F110W providing crucial information about Long Period Variables in M31, at a level of detail that has recently allowed the discovery of new variable star classes in the Magellanic Clouds, a very different stellar population. These observations are buttressed by an extensive map of the same fields with ACS and WFPC2 exposures in F555W and F814W, and a massive ground-based imaging patrol producing well-sampled light curves for more than 400,000 variable stars. Our primary goal is to collect sufficient NIR data in order to analyze and classify the huge number of long-period variables in our catalog {see below} through Period-Luminosity {P/L} diagrams. We will produce accurate P/L diagrams for both the bulge and a progression of locations throughout the disk of M31. These diagrams will be similar in quality to those currently in the Magellanic Clouds, with their lower metallicity, radically different star formation history, and larger spread in distance to the variables. M31 offers an excellent chance to study more typical disk populations, in a manner which might be extended to more distant galaxies where such variables are still visible, probing a much more evenly spread progenitor age distribution than cepheids {and perhaps useful as a distance scale alternative or cross-check}. Our data will also provide a massive and unique color- magnitude dataset, and allow us to confirm the microlensing nature of a large sample of candidate lensed sources in M31. We expect that this study will produce several important results, among them a better understanding of P/L and P/L-color relations for pulsating variables which are essential to the extragalactic distance ladder, will view these variables at a common distance over a range of metallicities {eliminating the distance-error vs. metallicity ambiguity between the LMC and SMC}, allow further insight into possible faint- variable mass-loss for higher metallicities, and in general produce a sample more typical of giant disk galaxies predominant in many studies.
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 DARKs. 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 11329
The Final SHOE; Completing a Rich Cepheid Field in NGC 1309
The Cycle 15 SHOES program {GO 10802} is a large HST program allocated 186 orbits to rebuild the distance ladder using NGC 4258 as a new anchor, a set of 6 recent, ideal type Ia supernovae and Cepheids in their hosts, and NICMOS as a single, homogeneous photometer of long period Cepheids. These tools provide the means to achieve a 4% measurement of the Hubble constant, an invaluable constraint for cosmic concordance fits to dark energy models. Unfortunately, the SHOES NICMOS integrations of long period Cepheids in the last and most recent nearby type Ia supernova host, NGC 1309, are too short because the preliminary estimate of its distance, 30 Mpc, was too low. Our refined estimate now based on the full reduction of both our Cycle 14 and 15 ACS data is 36 Mpc, or 0.4 mag farther. Fortunately, Nature was extremely kind providing a single rich NIC2 field in which we can fully make up for the shortfall due to its abundance of Cepheids. We are expensing our final 4 orbits on this field of a dozen P>30 day Cepheids and seek an additional 5 orbits to reach the depth for measuring the mean F160W magnitudes of the long-period Cepheids with the necessary signal-to-noise ratios of better than 10.
WFPC2 10789
The Role of Environment in the Formation of Dwarf Galaxies
Clusters of galaxies contain an overdensity of dwarfs compared to the field. Within galaxy clusters there is also a correlation between the overdensity of dwarfs and local galaxy density, such that areas of lower galaxy density contain more dwarfs per giant. The origin of these ‘extra’ dwarfs is unknown, but a large fraction of them did not form through standard collapses early in the universe. Some dwarf ellipticals in clusters have metal rich and young {< 6 Gyr} stellar populations while others contain old metal poor populations, suggesting multiple formation mechanisms and time scales. We propose to test the idea that dwarfs descend from galaxies accreted into clusters during the past 8 Gyr by correlating ages and metallicities of dwarfs with their internal structures - spiral arms, bars, and disks. If dwarfs originate from more massive galaxies then these features should be common in metal rich and young dwarfs. On the other hand, if no correlation is found it would suggest that dwarfs form through in-situ collapses of gas in the intragalactic medium after the universe was reionized.
WFPC2 10915
ACS Nearby Galaxy Survey
Existing HST observations of nearby galaxies comprise a sparse and highly non-uniform archive, making comprehensive comparative studies among galaxies essentially impossible. We propose to secure HST’s lasting impact on the study of nearby galaxies by undertaking a systematic, complete, and carefully crafted imaging survey of ALL galaxies in the Local Universe outside the Local Group. The resulting images will allow unprecedented measurements of: {1} the star formation history {SFH} of a >100 Mpc^3 volume of the Universe with a time resolution of Delta[log{t}]=0.25; {2} correlations between spatially resolved SFHs and environment; {3} the structure and properties of thick disks and stellar halos; and {4} the color distributions, sizes, and specific frequencies of globular and disk clusters as a function of galaxy mass and environment. To reach these goals, we will use a combination of wide-field tiling and pointed deep imaging to obtain uniform data on all 72 galaxies within a volume-limited sample extending to ~3.5 Mpc, with an extension to the M81 group. For each galaxy, the wide-field imaging will cover out to ~1.5 times the optical radius and will reach photometric depths of at least 2 magnitudes below the tip of the red giant branch throughout the limits of the survey volume. One additional deep pointing per galaxy will reach SNR~10 for red clump stars, sufficient to recover the ancient SFH from the color-magnitude diagram. This proposal will produce photometric information for ~100 million stars {comparable to the number in the SDSS survey} and uniform multi- color images of half a square degree of sky. The resulting archive will establish the fundamental optical database for nearby galaxies, in preparation for the shift of high- resolution imaging to the near-infrared.
WFPC2 11039
Polarizers Closeout
Observations of standard stars and a highly polarized reflection nebula are made as a final calibration for the WFPC2 polarizers. VISFLATS are also obtained.
FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY:
Significant Spacecraft Anomalies: (The following are preliminary reports of potential non-nominal performance that will be investigated.)
HSTARS:
10967 – GSacq(2,3,2) failed, Search Radius Limit exceeded on FGS 2 GSacq(2,3,2) at 243/05:47:45 failed at 05:53:54 with search radius limit exceeded on FGS 2. OBADs prior to GSACQ had RSS errors of 5692.67 and 7.42 arcseconds
COMPLETED OPS REQUEST: (None)
COMPLETED OPS NOTES: (None)
SCHEDULED SUCCESSFUL FGS GSacq 10 09 FGS REacq 05 05 OBAD with Maneuver 28 28
SIGNIFICANT EVENTS: (None)