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HST this week: 060



This week on HST


HST Programs: February 29 - March 6, 2016

Program Number Principal Investigator Program Title
13646 Ryan Foley, University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign Understanding the Progenitor Systems, Explosion Mechanisms, and Cosmological Utility of Type Ia Supernovae
13728 Steven Kraemer, Catholic University of America Do QSO2s have Narrow Line Region Outflows? Implications for quasar-mode feedback
13740 Daniel Stern, Jet Propulsion Laboratory Clusters Around Radio-Loud AGN: Spectroscopy of Infrared-Selected Galaxy Clusters at z>1.4
13776 Michael D. Gregg, University of California - Davis Completing The Next Generation Spectral Library
13820 David Ehrenreich, Observatoire de Geneve Search for an evaporating ocean on the super-Earth HD 97658b
13949 Andrew J. Levan, The University of Warwick A Chandra/HST survey of dark gamma-ray bursts
14068 Robert Scott Barrows, University of Colorado at Boulder Resolving the Nuclear Regions of Confirmed Offset AGN
14071 Sanchayeeta Borthakur, The Johns Hopkins University How are HI Disks Fed? Probing Condensation at the Disk-Halo Interface
14073 Martha L. Boyer, University of Maryland Assessing the Impact of Metallicity on Stellar Dust Production
14076 Boris T. Gaensicke, The University of Warwick An HST legacy ultraviolet spectroscopic survey of the 13pc white dwarf sample
14077 Boris T. Gaensicke, The University of Warwick The frequency and chemical composition of rocky planetary debris around young white dwarfs: Plugging the last gaps
14095 Gabriel Brammer, Space Telescope Science Institute - ESA Calibrating the Dusty Cosmos: Extinction Maps of Nearby Galaxies
14112 William B. Sparks, Space Telescope Science Institute Monitoring the ice plumes of Europa
14119 Luciana C. Bianchi, The Johns Hopkins University Understanding Stellar Evolution of Intermediate-Mass Stars from a New Sample of SiriusB-Like Binaries
14127 Michele Fumagalli, Durham Univ. First Measurement of the Small Scale Structure of Circumgalactic Gas via Grism Spectra of Close Quasar Pairs
14131 Ivana Orlitova, Astronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences of CR Origin of double peaks in Lyman-alpha spectra: diffuse halos or Lyman continuum leakage?
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.
14171 Guangtun Zhu, The Johns Hopkins University Characterizing the Circumgalactic Medium of Luminous Red Galaxies
14178 Matthew A. Malkan, University of California - Los Angeles WFC3 Infrared Spectroscopic Parallel Survey: The WISP Deep Fields
14179 Derck L. Massa, Space Science Institute FUVB Flat Fields for the COS FUV Blue Modes
14182 Thomas H. Puzia, Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile The Coma Cluster Core Project
14204 Antonino Paolo Milone, Australian National University Multiple stellar populations in two young Large Magellanic Cloud clusters: NGC1755 and NGC1866
14212 Karl Stapelfeldt, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center A Snapshot Imaging Survey of Spitzer-selected Young Stellar Objects in Nearby Star Formation Regions*.t23
14214 Pier-Emmanuel Tremblay, The University of Warwick The Suppression of Convection in Magnetic White Dwarfs
14225 Karl D. Gordon, Space Telescope Science Institute Small Magellanic Cloud Ultraviolet Dust Extinction: A Focused Study of Four Sightlines Near a Molecular Cloud with Variable 2175 A bumps
14227 Casey Papovich, Texas A & M University The CANDELS Lyman-alpha Emission At Reionization (CLEAR) Experiment
14233 Adam Schneider, University of Toledo Taming the Tepid Three
14241 Daniel Apai, University of Arizona Cloud Atlas: Vertical Cloud Structure and Gravity in Exoplanet and Brown Dwarf Atmospheres
14245 Miriam Garcia, Centro de Astrobiologia (CSIC/INTA) Inst. Nac. de Tec. Aero. The winds of the most Fe-poor massive stars of the Local Group: Sextans-A
14260 Drake Deming, University of Maryland A Metallicity and Cloud Survey of Exoplanetary Atmospheres Prior to JWST
14268 Nicolas Lehner, University of Notre Dame Project AMIGA: Mapping the Circumgalactic Medium of Andromeda
14273 Christopher James Manser, The University of Warwick A highly dynamical debris disc in an evolved planetary system
14327 Saul Perlmutter, University of California - Berkeley See Change: Testing time-varying dark energy with z>1 supernovae and their massive cluster hosts
14459 Rychard Bouwens, Universiteit Leiden Preparing for JWST through Constraints on the Bright End of the z~9 LF from CANDELS
14465 Jonathan Charles Tan, University of Florida Peering to the Heart of Massive Star Birth
14466 Ivana Orlitova, Astronomical Institute, Academy of Sciences of CR Lyman Alpha halo in a confirmed Lyman Continuum leaker
14471 Zolt Levay, Space Telescope Science Institute Hubble Heritage 2016
14484 Kenneth Chambers, University of Hawaii PS15dpn - a very unusual transient discovered by Pan-STARRS.

Selected highlights

GO 13820: Search for an evaporating ocean on the super-Earth HD 97658b


Comparison of Earth and HD97658b in transit
HD 97658 is an early-type K dwarf (spectral type K1) with a mass approximately 80% that of the Sun lying at a distance of ~21 parsecs. In 2011, the NASA-UC ETA-Earth search team announced the discovery of a ~8 Earth-mass planet, a "super-Earth", in a 9.49 day orbit around this star. The orbit is very close to circular with a semi-major axis of 0.083 AU. Subsequently, and after a little controversy, the system was found to be transiting, with observations by the Canadian MOST satellite indicating a radius only 2.34 times that of the Earth.Combined with the mass measurementy, this indicates an average density of ~3.44 g/cc; that, in trun, implies that there is a strong probability that the planet has a relatively small rocky core surrounded by an extensive atmosphere of volatile elements (eg H & O). The present program aims to test that hypothesis: at its small separation, HD 19658b has a "surface" temperature of ~760K, sufficiently high that a volatile atmosphere will evaporate, leading to a substantial cloud of hydrogen surrounding the planet. The present program aims to use the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph to search for the Lyman alpha absorption that would be associated with any such cloud.

GO 14178: WISP - A Survey of Star Formation Across Cosmic Time


A region of massive star formation
Star formation is the key astrophysical process in determining the overall evolution of galactic systems, the generation of heavy elements, and the overall enrichment of interstellar and intergalactic material. Tracing the overall evolution through a wide redshift range is crucial to understanding how gas and stars evolved to form the galaxies that we see around us now. The present program builds on the ability of HST to carry out parallel observations, using more than one instrument. While the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph is focused on obtaining ultraviolet spectra of unparalleled signal-to-noise, this program uses the near-infrared grisms mounted on the Wide-Field Camera 3 infrared channel to obtain low resolution spectra between 1 and 1.6 microns of randomly-selected nearby fields. The goal is to search for emission lines characteristic of star-forming regions. In particular, these observations are capable of detecting Lyman-alpha emission generated by star formation at redshifts z > 5.6. A total of up to 40 "deep" (4-5 orbit) and 20 "shallow" (2-3 orbit) fields will be targeted in the course of this observing campaign.

GO 14182: The Coma Cluster Core Project


Hubble image covering part of the central regions of the Coma cluster
The Coma cluster is the nearest rich galaxy cluster, lying at a distance of ~100 Mpc from the Milky Way. The cluster includes well over 1000 major galaxies, centred on two giant ellipticals, NGC 4874 and NGC 4889. Chandra observations show that the galaxies are embedded in very hot intracluster gas (see this site ). Cluster galaxies have also been surveyed at mid-infrared wavelengths by Spitzer, and in the ultraviolet by GALEX. Individual galaxies have been studied in the past using HST. In Cycle 15 the Advanced Camera for Surveys started a systematic imaging with ACS (with parallel observations with NICMOS) of the cluster core ( a 7x6 mosaic, covering approximately 400 sq. arcmin.), together with 40 fields at larger radii.That program was curtailed by the failure of ACS in January 27th. The present program builds on those observations, using Wide-Field Camera 3 to obtain complementary UV and IR data for the existing ACS images. ACS itself is being used in parallel to cover other regions with the cluster. Those observations will be capable of detecting dwarf galaxies with absolute magnitudes as faint as MB ~ -8, fainter than most of the Milky Way's dwarf spheroidal companions. Besides completing a detailed census of the low luminosity tail of the galaxian mass function, the observations will be used to probe colour gradients and internal chemical evolution.

GO 13033: Project AMIGA: Mapping the Circumgalactic Medium of Andromeda


The extent of Andromeda's gaseous halo, as sampled by COS
Galaxy formation, and the overall history of star formation within a galaxy, clearly demands the presence of gas. The detailed evolution therefore depends on how gas is accreted, recycled, circulated through the halo and, perhaps, ejected back into the intergalactic medium. Tracing that evolutionary history is difficult, since gas passes through many different phases, some of which are easier to detect than others. During accretion and, probably, subsequent recycling, the gas is expected to be reside predominantly at high temperatures. The most effective means of detecting such gas is through ultraviolet spectroscopy, where gas within nearby systems can be detected as absorption lines superimposed on the spectra of more distant objects, usually quasars. Extensive observations of galaxies at modest redshift (0.15 < z < 0.35) have shown that material extends to radii of hundreds of kpc, with a total mass in metals that is at least comparable with the mass in the central galaxy. Andromeda, the nearest large spiral to the milky Way,provides an unparalleled opportunity to probe

Past weeks:
page by Neill Reid, updated 23/12/2014
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