HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE DAILY REPORT #2953 PERIOD COVERED: 0000Z (UTC) 09/07/01 - 0000Z (UTC) 09/10/01 Daily Status Report as of 253/0000Z 1.0 OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED AND ACCOMPLISHED: 1.1 Completed Six Sets of WF/PC-2 8936 (Cycle 10 Supplemental Darks Pt1/3) The WF/PC-2 was used to perform a dark calibration program that obtains three dark frames every day to provide data for monitoring and characterizing the evolution of hot pixels. The proposal completed with no reported problems. 1.2 Completed STIS/MA2 9096 (Objective-Prism Spectroscopy of Massive Young Clusters) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (MA2) was used to greatly improve the spatial information by obtaining STIS NUV-MAMA objective-prism spectroscopy in the 1300-3600 Angstrom range of three nearby extragalactic regions with a total of ~ 10 MYCs since most of the present knowledge of the UV spectral properties of massive young clusters {MYCs} is based on IUE data with marginal spatial resolution. Slitless techniques are seldom attempted on crowded clusters due to the overlap among different sources. It is planned to overcome that problem by observing with two different roll angles, using comparison UV and optical images from the HST archive. The local rate check problems detailed in HSTAR 8333 and the previous report occurred three times during this proposal. The effect on the observations is not currently known. Otherwise, there were no other reported problems. 1.3 Completed Eleven Sets of WF/PC-2 8815 (Cycle 9 Earth Flats) The WF/PC-2 was used to monitor flatfield stability. This proposal obtains sequences of Earth streak flats to construct high quality flat fields for the WF/PC-2 filter set. These flat fields will allow mapping of the OTA illumination pattern and will be used in conjunction with previous internal and external flats to generate new pipeline superflats. The proposal completed nominally. 1.4 Completed Six Sets of STIS/CCD 8901 (Dark Monitor-Part 1) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to monitor the darks. There was no anomalous activity. 1.5 Completed STIS/CCD 9123 (Synchrotron Self-Compton Emission from the Radio Hot Spots of Cygnus A) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to observe radio galaxy Cygnus A recently studied in X-rays with Chandra. Four of the radio hot spots were detected with similar morphologies to the radio maps. The X-ray emission is almost certainly synchrotron self-Compton emission from the radio synchrotron emitting electrons. The predictions of this model are in excellent agreement with the Chandra spectra and also imply a magnetic field strength close to equipartition. It is proposed to image the predicted SSC emission from the hot spots in the optical with goals a} to confirm the optical fluxes predicted by the SSC model, and b} to use the radio synchrotron and optical SSC brightness distributions at ~eq 0.1 arc sec resolution to determine the internal structures of the magnetic fields and relativistic particles within the two brighter hot spots. The proposal completed with no reported problems. 1.6 Completed Nine Sets of WF/PC-2 9244 (POMS Test Proposal: WFII Parallel Archive Proposal Continuation) The WF/PC-2 was used to perform a generic target version of the Archival Pure Parallel program. The program will be used to take parallel images of random areas of the sky, following the recommendations of the Parallels Working Group. The observations completed with no anomalous activity. 1.7 Completed Two Sets of WF/PC-2 9057 (Host Galaxies of Obscured QSOs Identified by 2MASS) The WF/PC-2 was used to perform a snapshot survey of red QSOs discovered in The Two Micron All Sky Survey {2MASS} to investigate the detailed properties of their host galaxies. This large, possibly dominant, population of QSOs in the local universe has been previously overlooked because reddening by {intrinsic} obscuration along our line of sight causes their colors to be too red for identification by traditional "UV- excess" techniques. Their near-IR colors are similar to PG- type {UV-excess} QSOs, but it is far from certain whether they are indeed from the same parent population or represent a completely new class of QSO. There were no reported problems. 1.8 Completed Six Sets of STIS/CCD 9285 (POMS Test Proposal: STIS Non-scripted Parallel Proposal Continuation III) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to make low galactic latitude, non-scripted parallel observations as part of a POMS test proposal. The observations were completed as planned, and no anomalies were reported. 1.9 Completed STIS/CCD 9131 (Imaging the Host Galaxies of High Redshift Type Ia Supernovae) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to complete the snapshot survey of distant galaxies of known redshift which hosted supernovae {SNe} of Type Ia found via the Supernova Cosmology Project {SCP}. No problems were seen. 1.10 Completed Three Sets of STIS/CCD 8903 (Bias Monitor - Part 1) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to 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. There were no problems. 1.11 Completed STIS/CCD 9110 (A Search for Kuiper Belt Object Satellites) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to investigate whether the large number of collisions thought to have taken place in the primordial Kuiper belt suggest that many Kuiper belt objects {KBOs} could have suffered binary-forming collisions similar to that which formed the Pluto -- Charon binary. Detection of such KBO satellites would allow measurement of KBO masses, would help to understand the past collisional environment of the Kuiper belt, and would give a context to the otherwise unique-seeming formation of the Pluto -- Charon binary. The acquisition failure described in 2.1 and HSTAR 8334 occurred during this proposal as did the successful re-acquisition. The exact effect on the proposal is not currently known. The proposal completed with no further reported problems. 1.12 Completed Two Sets of WF/PC-2 9060 (Photometry of a Statistically Significant Sample of Kuiper Belt Objects) The WF/PC-2 was used to propel the physical study of KBOs forward by performing accurate photometry at V, R, and I on a sample of up to 150 KBOs. The sample is made up of objects that will be observed at thermal infrared wavelengths by SIRTF and will be used with those data to derive the first accurate diameters and albedos for a large sample of KBOs. The observations completed nominally. 1.13 Completed STIS/CCD/MA1 9064 (HI Detection of an Extra-Solar Planetary Atmosphere) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA1) was used to observe the extra-solar planet discovered around HD 209458 that is the unique one also detected through occultation. During its transit, we will obtain spectra of the HI and DI Lyman-Alpha line at 1215 Angstrom. No problems occurred. 1.14 Completed STIS/CCD 9128 (A Snapshot Survey of Absorption Lines from High Velocity Clouds in the Milky Way) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to search for Mg II and Mg I absorption from Galactic High Velocity Clouds {HVCs} along the sightlines of 51 of the brightest QSOs, BL Lacs and Seyfert 2 galaxies in the sky. The observations completed with no rpeorted problems. 1.15 Completed STIS/CCD/MA1 9179 (Calibrating Convection Efficiency With Quasi-Molecular Features In Magnetic White Dwarfs) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA1) was used to observe recently-discovered quasi-molecular absorption features of Lyman Alpha in UV spectra of magnetic white dwarfs taken with IUE. Hitherto, such features have only been known in non-magnetic objects where they offered a very accurate determination of the atmospheric parameters. There were no reported problems. 1.16 Completed WF/PC-2 8802 (Saturn's Rings and Small Moons) The WF/PC-2 was used to continue the long-term survey of Saturn's to obtain a coherent set of high resolution, multi-color images of the Saturnian ring system over the full range of ring tilt and phase angles accessible from the Earth over the course of 1/4 Saturn year {7 Earth years}. Previous observations explored the rings from their nearly edge-on aspect, just after the most recent ring plane crossings, to their current moderate inclination. Here, it is proposed to complete our survey during the next three Saturn oppositions {Cycles 9--11}, as the rings gradually approach their most open configuration, shortly before the arrival of the Cassini spacecraft at Saturn. The key goals are to investigate the composition, structure, and particle properties of the rings from variations of ring brightness and color with radius, tilt and phase angle, to measure the azimuthal asymmetry of the A ring and the temporal variability of the clumpy F ring, to follow the enigmatic behavior of the renegade satellites Prometheus and Pandora, and to observe the co-orbital satellites Janus and Epimetheus as they exchange orbits in February 2002. No problems were observed. 1.17 Completed Two Sets of STIS/CCD 9148 (Light Echos and the Nature of Type Ia Supernovae) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to take STIS snapshot images of a subset of 43 well observed Type Ia supernovae {SNIa}, most of which have been discovered in late type galaxies over the last 40 years to make a systematic search for light echos around SN Ia. STIS will also observe a sample of 10 SN II and SN Ib/c, which are believed to be the result of massive star core collapse and, therefore, to be thin-disk population objects, in order to make an empirical calibration of the accuracy of our method for determining scale heights. The SN Ia sample will provide a direct as well as accurate estimate of the scale height of SN Ia which is an important clue to the progenitors of these events. The proposal completed nominally. 1.18 Completed Three Sets of STIS/CCD 9066 (Closing in on the Hydrogen Reionization Edge of the Universe) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used in parallel constrain the Hydrogen reionization edge in emission that marks the transition from a neutral to a fully ionized IGM at a predicted redshifts. The proposal completed uneventfully. 1.19 Completed Two Sets of WF/PC-2 8867 (Gamma-Ray Bursts: Discovering The Progenitors And Understanding The Explosion - Visits A0-R0) The WF/PC-2 was used to observe a gamma-ray burster, GRB010222. Gamma-ray burst astronomy, one of the most active and exciting frontiers in astrophysics, is now entering a critical stage -- with dramatic leaps in understanding of these events, as well as new discoveries. Improvements in triggering and positioning accuracy provided by the SAX and HETE-2 gamma-ray satellites will allow entirely new classes of events to be studied. Given the recent progress in this field, the proposers are now in a position to design precision, broadband measurements that can provide quantitative information on the as-yet unknown energy sources, the explosion geometry, and the surrounding medium. In particular, the growing evidence of an intimate connection between SNe and GRBs can be definitively tested. The proposal completed with no reported problems. 1.20 Completed STIS/CCD/MA2 8569 (A New Survey for Low-Redshift Damped Lyman-Alpha Lines in QSO MgII Systems) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA2) was used to support studies which have shown that most of the observable neutral gas mass in the Universe resides in QSO damped LyAlpha {DLA} systems. However, at low redshift, DLA can only be found by searching in the UV with HST. By boot-strapping from the MgII statistics, we will be able to further improve the determination of the low- redshift statistical properties of DLA {their incidence and cosmological mass density} and open up new opportunities for studies at low redshift. The observations completed nominally. 1.21 Completed Two Sets of STIS/MA1 8843 (Cycle 9 MAMA Dark Measurements) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (MA1) was used to perform the routine monitoring of the MAMA detector dark noise. The proposal completed nominally. 1.22 Completed Three Sets of STIS/CCD 9136 (T Tauri Star Coronagraphic Survey: A PMS Protoplanetary Disk Census) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to observe pre-main sequence solar-mass stars, the T Tauri stars that Millimeter and IR studies suggest at least 50 percent have circumstellar disks similar to the disk from which our planetary system formed. High spatial resolution, high dynamic range imaging of such systems will map the spatial distribution of material around the star, constraining the disk sizes and inclinations, and provide a first assessment of when structure in the disk, such as cleared central zones and annuli, which has been linked to planet formation, develops. All observations completed without incident. 1.23 Completed STIS/CCD/MA1 9137 (Quasar Absorbers and Large Scale Structure) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA1) was used to perform spectroscopy of 15 bright quasars in a 22 square degree region that has well-sampled galaxy redshifts. No problems were encountered. 1.24 Completed WF/PC-2 9124 (Mid-UV SNAPSHOT Survey of Nearby Irregulars: Galaxy Structure and Evolution Benchmark) The WF/PC-2 was used to investigate the relation between star formation and the global physical characteristics of galaxies to interpret the morphologies of distant galaxies in terms of their evolutionary status. Distant galaxies are primarily observed in their rest frame mid-ultraviolet. They resemble nearby late-type galaxies, but are they really physically similar classes of objects? It is proposed to address this question through a SNAPSHOT survey in the 2 mid-UV filter F300W of 98 nearby late-type, irregular and peculiar galaxies. No problems were reported. 1.25 Completed STIS/CCD/MA2 9051 (Identifying Damped Lyman-alpha Galaxies at z~1) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA2) was used to look for samped Lyman-alpha absorption systems that contain the bulk of the neutral gas in the Universe in the redshift range z = 0.5 - 5, yet the nature of the galaxies responsible for the absorption is not well understood. Only recently have observers found more than a handful of damped absorbers at redshifts z < 1.5. Using the FIRST Bright Quasar Survey {FBQS}, with over a 1000 quasars, the proposers have undertaken a survey to build a complete picture of he nature of the galaxies responsible for damped Lyman-alpha absorption systems at z~1 and to double the sample size at this redshift. As described in 2.1 and HSTAR 8337, the acquisition and re-acquisition for this proposal defaulted to fine lock backup on one FGS only, possibly affecting the observations. Otherwise, no other problems were encountered. 1.26 Completed STIS/MA1/MA2 9151 (UV Snapshot Observation of Nearby Star Forming Galaxies) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (MA1 and MA2) was used to obtain FUV and NUV images of nearby emission- line galaxies with existing star-formation rate {SFR} measurements from their HAlpha flux. Recently, the use of the UV flux as a measure of SFR has gained much popularity for estimating SFRs at different cosmic epochs. However, the SFR estimated from UV flux could be greatly biased due to dust extinction. The KPNO International Spectroscopic Survey {KISS} provides a large sample of nearby HAlpha-selected starforming galaxies for which rich optical spectra are available for measuring metallicity and dust extinction through line ratios. By observing a subset of nearby emission-line galaxies in the KISS sample with the STIS FUV and NUV MAMA, a direct comparison between UV and Halpha SFR estimates will be possible. This will allow us to understand the effect of dust extinction on UV flux for star- forming galaxies over a wide range of HAlpha luminosity, metallicity absolute magnitude, and B-V color . A rough dust extinction curve will be constructed for such objects, making it possible to test plausible dust extinction curves used in previous SFR studies of the distant universe. Also, high-resolution UV images will allow us to search for plausible local counterparts to high redshift galaxies whose rest-frame UV morphology is available from existing optical HST data. As described in 2.1 and HSTAR 8337, the acquisition and re-acquisition for this proposal defaulted to fine lock backup on one FGS only, possibly affecting the observations. Otherwise, there were no further reported problems. 1.27 Completed FGS/1 9168 (The Distances to AM CVn Stars) Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) #1 was used to determine the parallaxes and proper motions of the five brightest of the seven known AM CVn systems. AM CVn systems are binaries where mass is transferred from a completely hydrogen-deficient, degenerate mass donor to a white dwarf primary through a helium accretion disk. A better understanding of these systems is crucial for a number of reasons: (1) to study the late stages of binary evolution, (2) to study the effect of chemical composition on the physics of accretion discs, (3) to estimate their contribution to the Supernovae Ia rate, and (4) to estimate their contribution to the gravitational radiation background. All observations completed with no reported problems. 1.28 Completed STIS/MA1/MA2 8917 (MAMA Dispersion Solution Check) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (MA1 and MA2) was used to determine wavelength dispersion solutions on a yearly basis as part of a long-term monitoring program {implemented as Program 7651 in Cycle 7, Program 8430 in Cycle 8 and 8859 in Cycle 9}. No anomalous activity was reported. 1.29 Completed WF/PC-2 8825 (Decontaminations and Associated Observations 4/4) The WF/PC-2 was used to perform the monthly decontaminations (decons). Also included are instrument monitors tied to decons: photometric stability check, focus monitor, pre- and post-decon internals {bias, intflats, kspots, & darks}, UV throughput check, VISFLAT sweep, and internal UV flat check. The proposal completed with no reported problems. 1.30 Completed WF/PC-2 9042 (An Archive To Detect The Progenitors Of Massive, Core-Collapse Supernovae) The WF/PC-2 was used to search for supernovae that have massive star progenitors. The already extensive HST archive and high-resolution ground-based images of galaxies within ~20 Mpc enables us to resolve and quantify their individual bright stellar content. As massive, evolved stars are the most luminous single objects in a galaxy, the progenitors of core-collapse supernovae should be directly detectable on pre-explosion images. One Type II progenitor has been observed this year, and the investigators have proposed a short, companion WFPC2 proposal to confirm this candidate and identify a second. The observations completed nominally. 2.0 FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: 2.1 Guide Star Acquisitions: Scheduled Acquisitions: 29 Successful: 28 The acquisition scheduled for 250/125000Z failed when the search radius limit was exceeded. HSTAR 8334 was written. An FHST map taken at 150/125736Z indicated large errors (-42.518, 31.066, -49.293). An ARU/PRT was uplinked and the following re-acquisition was successful. The proposal described in 1.11 was affected. Per HSTAR 8337, the acquisition at 252/170522Z defaulted to fine lock backup on FGS-3 only. The following re-acquisition at 252/1830Z suffered the same fate. The proposals detailed in 1.25 and 1.26 may have been affected. Scheduled Re-acquisitions: 21 Successful: 21 2.2 FHST Updates: Scheduled: 60 Successful: 60 2.3 Operations Notes: Using ROP DF-18A, the engineering status buffer limits were adjusted four times. The SSR EDAC error counter was cleared nine times per ROP SR-1A. Due to the acquisition failure detailed above, the STIS flight software error counter was reset at 250/1841Z as directed by ROP NS-12. The STIS MCE-1 reset at 252/013254Z while the high voltage was on and while outside any SAA interval. The STIS flight software error counter was cleared at 252/0152Z, per ROP NS-12. MAMA-1 was recovered at 252/0255Z via normal SMS commanding at the next time high voltage was turned on. A TTR was written when there was a required re-transmit at 252/091601Z during a 486 load. Another TTR was generated when commanding became impossible at 253/0737Z while on the "C" string. The same commands were successfully transmitted using the "A" string. 3.0 SIGNIFICANT FORTHCOMING EVENTS: Continuation of normal science observations and calibrations. /CAW