HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE DAILY REPORT #3023 PERIOD COVERED: 0000Z (UTC) 12/20/01 - 0000Z (UTC) 12/21/01 Daily Status Report as of 355/0000Z 1.0 OBSERVATIONS SCHEDULED AND ACCOMPLISHED: 1.1 Completed FGS/1 9183 (Completing the Astrometric Orbit for a Pair of Pre-Main Sequence Low-Mass Stars) Fine Guidance Sensor #1 was used to resolve a visual binary that is part of the closest system of pre-main sequence stars, HD 98800. This system is 50 pc away and this binary has a period just under a year, meaning the separation is about 20 milliarcsec. The two stars have similar brightnesses. The goal is to determine an astrometric orbit which, when combined with radial velocity observations, leads to the first dynamically-determined masses for low-mass pre-main sequence stars. All observations completed normally. 1.2 Completed Eleven 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. 1.3 Completed Five 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. 1.4 Completed Five Sets of WF/PC-2 8937 (Cycle 9 Supplemental Darks pt2/3) The WF/PC-2 was used obtain three dark frames every day to provide data for monitoring and characterizing the evolution of hot pixels. No problems were encountered. 1.5 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. 1.6 Completed STIS/CCD 9177 (Tidal Disruption of Stars by Massive Black Holes in Galaxy Nuclei: After the Flare) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to observe supermassive black hole that will rip apart a star that strays within its tidal radius, causing an Eddington-limited UV/X-ray flare for several months as the orbiting debris accretes. While such events are predicted to occur at most once in 10^4 yr per galaxy, an experiment was performed in 1990-91 which sampled hundreds of thousands of galaxies in the ideal wavelength band. Three galaxies had unusual X-ray flares, but no evidence for nuclear activity in ground-based spectra. To establish beyond a reasonable doubt that these were tidal disruption events, it is proposed to make a sensitive search for permanent Seyfert activity, the only possible alternative to the disruption hypothesis. Nuclear optical spectra obtained through a narrow slit will reject most of the starlight and place limits on AGN-like emission line activity below those of the weakest Seyferts. Masses of black holes could be studied by monitoring the outburst light curves and the spectra of the tidal debris. The proposal completed with no reported problems. 1.7 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. 1.8 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. 1.9 Completed STIS/CCD 9143 (Spectrophotometry of Nearby Seyfert 2 Nuclei: Can We Eliminate the Seyfert 2 Class?) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD) was used to investigate Seyfert 2s that are distinguished by the absence of the broad emission lines characteristic of Seyfert 1s and more luminous QSOs. Are Seyfert 2s fundamentally different from Seyfert 1s and their brighter cousins? Or is the broad emission line region in Seyfert 2s simply suppressed by obscuring material as postulated by the unification model? If the latter model is correct, the weak broad emission lines in the Seyfert 2s may simply be overwhelmed by starlight from the circumnuclear region, particularly in the case of recent star formation. It is proposed to determine if all Seyfert 2s have {weak} broad emission line regions by obtaining long-slit STIS spectroscopy for a well-defined sample of 20 Seyfert 2s {3 archival, 17 new}. The observations completed with no anomalous activity. 1.10 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. 1.11 Completed FGS/1 8897 (Long Term Monitoring of FGS1R in Position Mode) Fine Guidance Sensor #1R was used to monitor its long-term evolution, presumably due to disorption of water from the instrument's graphite epoxy composits. This manifests principally as a change in the plate scale and secondarily as a change in the distortions. These effects are well modeled by adjustments to the rhoA and kA parameters which are used to transform the star selector servo angles into FGS {x, y} detector space coordinates. By observing the relative positions of stars in a standard cluster at a fixed telescope pointing and orientation, the evolution of rhoA and kA can be monitored and calibrated to preserve the astrometric integrity of the FGS. There were no reported problems. 1.12 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. 1.13 Completed Two Sets of 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. 1.14 Completed STIS/CCD/MA2 9166 (Fossil Gaseous Halos of Massive Galaxies at z~1) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA2) was used to observe host galaxies of high-redshift, powerful radio sources that are likely the progenitors of present-day gE and cD galaxies, and therefore provide important laboratories in which to investigate the formation of massive galaxies in the early Universe. Many high-redshift radio galaxies exhibit giant, Ly-alpha halos. Similar nebulae without associated radio sources have recently been discovered in a galaxy overdensity at z = 3.09. The LyAlpha luminosity of these halos is comparable to the total X-ray luminosities of low--z X--ray clusters, and may reflect the hot, cooling gas reservoir from which the galaxy/cluster is forming. The observations completed as planned. 1.15 Completed Three Sets of WF/PC-2 8941 (Cycle 10 UV Earthflats) The WF/PC-2 was used to monitor flat field stability by obtaining sequences of earth streak flats to improve the quality of pipeline flat fields for the WFPC2 UV filter set. The proposal had no problems. 1.16 Completed 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. 1.17 Completed STIS/CCD/MA1 9036 (An Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Survey of Star-Forming Galaxies in the Local Universe) The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (CCD and MA1) was used to perform a comprehensive STIS ultraviolet spectroscopic survey of star-forming galaxies in the local universe. The sample covers a broad range of morphologies, chemical composition, and luminosity. The observations will provide spectral coverage between 1200 and 3100 Angstrom, at a resolution of 100 to 200 kms and S/N of about 30. The data set will allow the proposers to document and quantify the effects of massive stars on the interstellar medium and to infer implications for the evolution of the host galaxies. The proposal completed with no anomalous activity. 1.18 Completed 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. 2.0 FLIGHT OPERATIONS SUMMARY: 2.1 Guide Star Acquisitions: Scheduled Acquisitions: 8 Successful: 8 Scheduled Re-acquisitions: 7 Successful: 7 2.2 FHST Updates: Scheduled: 21 Successful: 21 2.3 Operations Notes: The operations team participated in Joint Integrated Simulation #7 (Two Short Deploys) from 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Using ROP SR-1A, the SSR-1 EDAC error counter was cleared at 354/1842Z. A TTR was written for a period of minor frame gaps from 354/230534Z to 354/0630Z caused by mutual interference. There was no resultant data loss. 3.0 SIGNIFICANT FORTHCOMING EVENTS: Continuation of normal science observations and calibrations. /CAW