HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE DAILY REPORT #3006 PERIOD COVERED: 0000Z (UTC) 11/27/01 - 0000Z (UTC) 11/28/01 Daily Status Report as of 332/0000Z 1.0 OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED AND ACCOMPLISHED: 1.1 Completed Three 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/CCD 9077 (Survey of the LMC Planetary Nebulae) The Space telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to perform a snapshot survey of all known LMC planetary nebulae {PNe} in order to study the co-evolution of the nebulae and their central stars, and to probe the chemical enrichment history of the LMC. There were no reported problems. 1.3 Completed Two 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. 1.4 Completed Six 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. 1.5 Completed STIS/CCD 8619 (Critical Spectroscopic Variations In Eta Carinae) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to observe the very massive, unstable, persistently enigmatic star Eta Carinae that has implications for several branches of astrophysics. While HST has produced a series of remarkable discoveries concerning this object, the nature of the central star remains elusive. Now, however, recent developments offer, for the first time, an approach that can settle certain long-standing questions which have been obstacles to understanding this unique object. A 5.5-year spectroscopic and X-ray cycle has been confirmed. STIS now provides the most promising and very likely the only way to test whether Eta Car is a 5.5-yr binary system. If it is, STIS will also allow us to constrain the parameters, needed to assess the companion star's possible role in past outbursts and ejecta. If the data conflict with binary models, then the 5.5-yr effect is probably a thermal cycle which will give novel information about the star's structure. In addition to the periodicity, a large, almost unprecedented brightening, first noticed in HST data, has occurred since 1997 and merits followup observations. The observations completed with no reported problems. 1.6 Completed STIS/CCD 9088 (Next Generation Spectral Library of Stars) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to produce a "Next Generation'' Spectral Library of 600 stars for use in modeling the integrated light of galaxies and clusters by using the low dispersion UV and optical gratings of STIS. The library will be roughly equally divided among four metallicities, very low {Fe/H < -1.5}, low {-1.5 < Fe/H < -0.5}, near-solar {-0.5 < Fe/H < 0.1}, and super-solar {Fe/H > 0.1}, well-sampling the entire HR-diagram in each bin. Such a library will surpass all extant compilations and have lasting archival value, well into the Next Generation Space Telescope era. No problems occurred. 1.7 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. 1.8 Completed Three Sets of WF/PC-2 8942 (Cycle 10 Intflat Sweeps and Linearity Test) The WF/PC-2 was used to monitor the pixel-to-pixel flatfield response and provide a linearity check. These intflat sequences are done once during the year and 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. There were no reported problems. 1.9 Completed WF/PC-2/STIS/CCD/MA2 9127 (The UV interstellar Extinction in Nearby Galaxies: M33) The WF/PC-2 and the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA2) were used to investigate further the dust properties that vary in different environments and from galaxy to galaxy. The proposers had previously used HST to determine the UV extinction curve in M31. That result, together with other studies of the Magellanic Clouds and Milky Way, suggested that the dust particles vary and the proposers plan to enlarge the sample by studying the UV extinction properties of dust in M33, sampling different galactocentric distances and levels of star formation activity. There were no reported problems. 1.10 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. 1.11 Completed 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. 1.12 Completed STIS/CCD 9070 (A Census of Nuclear Star Clusters in Late-Type Spiral Galaxies: II. Spectroscopy and Stellar Populations) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to investigate spiral galaxies that have a prominent star cluster in their dynamical center. Statistics for cluster frequency, size, and luminosity remain incomplete. The proposal completed as planned. 1.13 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. 1.14 Completed 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. 1.15 Completed FGS/1 8898 (Calibrating FGS1r's Interferometric Response as a Function of Spectral Color) Fine Guidance Sensor #1 was used to obtain reference point source Transfer Functions {S-Curves} through the F583W filter and the F5ND attenuator at the center position of the FGS1r FOV for a variety of stellar spectral colors. The data will be added to the library of point source interferograms that was assembled from the Cycles 8 and 9 calibration program. These Transfer Functions are needed to support the analysis of GO science data for the study of close and wide binary star systems and for determining the angular diameter of extended sources. The proposal completed with no reported problems. 1.16 Completed 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. 1.17 Completed STIS/CCD 8669 (Merger-Driven Evolution Of Galactic Nuclei: Observations Of The Toomre Sequence) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to observe galaxy mergers that are believed responsible for triggering starburst and AGN activity in galaxies, and even perhaps transforming spiral galaxies into ellipticals. The proposal completed nominally. 2.0 FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: 2.1 Guide Star Acquisitions: Scheduled Acquisitions: 8 Successful: 8 As documented in HSTAR 8406, the acquisition at 331/174737Z defaulted to fine lock backup on FGS-1 only when FGS-2 never transitioned from SSM control. No observations were affected. Scheduled Re-acquisitions: 6 Successful: 6 2.2 FHST Updates: Scheduled: 23 Successful: 23 2.3 Operations Notes: The SSR EDAC error counter was cleared at 332/0020Z per ROP SR-1A. The CCS engineering status buffer limit for SESBSLD was adjusted at 332/0855Z, using ROP DF-18A. 3.0 SIGNIFICANT FORTHCOMING EVENTS: Continuation of normal science observations and calibrations. /CAW