Program Number |
Principal Investigator |
Program Title |
Links |
11202 |
Leon Koopmans, Kapteyn Astronomical Institute |
The Structure of Early-type Galaxies: 0.1-100 Effective Radii |
Abstract |
11208 |
Tommaso L. Treu, University of California - Santa Barbara |
The co-evolution of spheroids and black holes in the last six billion years |
Abstract |
11359 |
Robert W. O'Connell, The University of Virginia |
Panchromatic WFC3 survey of galaxies at intermediate z: Early Release Science program for Wide Field Camera 3. |
Abstract |
11565 |
Sebastien Lepine, American Museum of Natural History |
A search for astrometric companions to very low-mass, Population II stars |
Abstract |
11588 |
Raphael Gavazzi, CNRS, Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris |
Galaxy-Scale Strong Lenses from the CFHTLS survey |
Abstract |
11599 |
Richard A. Wade, The Pennsylvania State University |
Distances of Planetary Nebulae from SNAPshots of Resolved Companions |
Abstract |
11644 |
Michael E. Brown, California Institute of Technology |
A dynamical-compositional survey of the Kuiper belt: a new window into the formation of the outer solar system
|
Abstract |
11623 |
Gloria Koenigsberger, Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico |
Shaping the pre-supernova circumstellar environment |
Abstract |
11649 |
Jean-Claude M. Gerard, Universite de Liege |
Elucidating the mystery of the Io footprint time variations |
Abstract |
11657 |
Letizia Stanghellini, National Optical Astronomy Observatories |
The population of compact planetary nebulae in the Galactic Disk |
Abstract |
11670 |
Peter Garnavich, University of Notre Dame |
The Host Environments of Type Ia Supernovae in the SDSS Survey |
Abstract |
11704 |
Brian Chaboyer, Dartmouth College |
The Ages of Globular Clusters and the Population II Distance Scale |
Abstract |
11719 |
Julianne Dalcanton, University of Washington |
A Calibration Database for Stellar Models of Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars |
Abstract |
11789 |
George Fritz Benedict, University of Texas at Austin |
An Astrometric Calibration of Population II Distance Indicators |
Abstract |
11998 |
Karen J. Meech, University of Hawaii |
Determining the Rotational Phase of Comet 9P/Tempel 1 in Support of the StardustNExT Mission
|
Abstract |
12003 |
Heidi Hammel, Space Science Institute |
The Impact Event on Jupiter in 2009 |
Abstract |
HST image of the Eskimo planetary nebula, NGC 2392
|
Planetary nebulae are the spectacular results of the penultiumate evoutionary phase
of intermediate-mass stars. Towards the conclusion of the second, or asymptotic, giant branch,
~1 to ~7 solar mass stars have achieved radii exceeding 100 RSun and their
extensive envelopes are subject to long-period, opacity-driven pulsations and
substantial mass loss. AGB evolution terminates with the ejection of the stellar envelope,
revealing the bare core, with an initial surface temperature approaching 100,000K. The core
cools to become a white dwarf but, during the initial phase, its luminosity is sufficient to
excite gases in the expanding envelope, producing a planetary nebula. These objects are
extremely spectacular, but also, in Galactic terms, rare. As a result, we only know
reliable distances to a handful of such systems. The present program aims to tackle this
issue through observations of planetary nebulae with known or suspected lower-mass
companions. Once confirmed as binaries, distances can be estimated using the companions,
which still reside on the main sequence.
|
SN 2007uy and 2008D in NGC 2770
|
Supernovae have long attracted the attention of both amateur and professional
astronomers in their own right, as a means of studying the violent eruption
and death of massive stars and degenerates. However, in the last decade they
have also acquired considerable importance as distance indicators, tracing
the expansion of the universe to redshifts well beyond the reach of more
conventional yardsticks, such as cepheids, and providing a key underpinning
for the hypothesised existcen of dark energy. Understanding the supernovae
themselves, and, in particular, their progenitors, is key to accurately
interpreting their luminosities and distances. The present program aims
to tackle that aspect of the problem by using ACS to obtain deep,
high resolution images of galaxies that have harboured recent type Ia
supernovae.
The targets are all drawn from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey, which has
uncovered more than than 500 type Ia supernovae,.
The supernovae themselves are long gone from view, but the ACS data will
be used to probe the stellar populations in the immediate vicinity of the
explosion, and hence gain a better understanding of the likely progenitor.
|
HST WFC3 observations of the comet scar on Jupiter
|
One of HST's most cited set of observations was the series of images taken in July 1994
as the dishevelled remnants of Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 crashed into Jupiter. That event highlighted
the catastrophic consequences of cosmic impacts, and sparked considerable interest in identifying
earth-crossing asteroids and comets. Fifteen years later, on 19 July 2009, an Australian amateur astronomer,
Anthony Wesley, noticed a strange dark 'scar" near Jupiter's southern pole. The feature was quickly confirmed
by other astronomers, both amateur and professional, and was quickly judged as likely to be the result
of another, completely unexpected, cometary impact. The SL9 impact was thought to be a once-in-a-lifetime
(if not more) event; clearly, the impact rate is higher than previously suspected.
At the time of the new event, HST was deeply immersed in the initial
on-orbit instrument performance tests, but the science staff were able to interrupt those procedures
for a few orbits to obtain images with Wide-Field Camera 3. Further observatio9ns will be obtained
at a later date to track the evolution of the feature, as Jovian winds disperse the detritus through
the atmosphere.
|