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Program Number | Principal Investigator | Program Title | Links |
10632 | Massimo Stiavelli, Space Telescope Science Institute | Searching for galaxies at z>6.5 in the Hubble Ultra Deep Field | Abstract |
10633 | Nial Tanvir, University of Hertfordshire | GRB afterglows and host galaxies at very high redshifts | Abstract |
10792 | Matthias Dietrich, The Ohio State University Research Foundation | Quasars at Redshift z=6 and Early Star Formation History | Abstract |
10793 | Avishay Gal-Yam, California Institute of Technology | A Survey for Supernovae in Massive High-Redshift Clusters | Abstract |
10802 | Adam Riess, Space Telescope Science Institute | SHOES-Supernovae, HO, for the Equation of State of Dark energy | Abstract |
10812 | Slawomir Piatek, New Jersey Institute of Technology | Space Motions for the Draco and Sextans Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxies | Abstract |
10816 | Tom Brown, Space Telescope Science Institute | The Formation History of Andromeda's Extended Metal-Poor Halo | Abstract |
10824 | Oleg Gnedin, The Ohio State University Research Foundation | Measuring the Shape and Orientation of the Galactic Dark-Matter Halo using Hypervelocity Stars | Abstract |
10825 | Bradford Holden, University of California - Santa Cruz | The Formation Epoch of Early-type Galaxies: Constraints from the Fundamental Plane at z=1.3 | Abstract |
10829 | Paul Martini, The Ohio State University | Secular Evolution at the End of the Hubble Sequence | Abstract |
10848 | Mark Lacy, Jet Propulsion Laboratory | Relating the host galaxies of type-2 quasars to their infrared properties | Abstract |
10863 | Anthony Gonzalez, University of Florida | Magnifying the High-z Universe with the Bullet Cluster 1E0657-56 | Abstract |
10886 | Adam Bolton, Smithsonian Institution Astrophysical Observatory | The Sloan Lens ACS Survey: Towards 100 New Strong Lenses | Abstract |
10893 | Peter Garnavich, University of Notre Dame | Sweeping Away the Dust: Reliable Dark Energy with an Infrared Hubble Diagram | Abstract |
10912 | Howard Bond, Space Telescope Science Institute | Trigonometric Calibration of the Distance Scale for Classical Novae | Abstract |
10917 | Derek Fox, The Pennsylvania State University | Afterglows and Environments of Short-Hard Gamma-Ray Bursts | Abstract |
GO 10793: A Survey for Supernovae in Massive High-Redshift Clusters
GO 10816: The Formation History of Andromeda's Extended Metal-Poor Halo
GO 10863: Magnifying the High-z Universe with the Bullet Cluster 1E0657-56
Combined optical and x-ray image of the "Bullet" galaxy cluster: the red outlines the distribution of hot, baryonic gas (from X-rays); the blue maps the underlying (dark matter) mass distribution. | The "Bullet Cluster", 1E0657-56, lying at a redshift z=0.296, actually comprises two galaxy clusters that appear to be undergoing a collision, perhaps leading eventually to a merger. Individual galaxies in each cluster are little affected by this process, passing through without interactions. Hot gas in the intracluster medium, however, collides dissipationally, and consequently its density distribution is offset from the underlying galaxies. The ongoing collision also likely accounts for the fact that 1E06757-56 has one of the hottest (T ~ 70 x 106 K) and most luminous gaseous components. Very recently, Clowe and collaborators ( see this link ) have taken advantage of this unusual event to provide the strongest evidence to date for the existence of dark matter on large scales. As the accompanying figure shows, they have used weak lensing to demonstrate that the underlying mass distribution remains centred on the galaxy distribution. This indicates, first, that the hot gas does not dominate the mass distribution in these clusters (as required by modified gravity theories), and, second that the dark matter component is non-dissipational. The present proposal aims to take advantage of another property of the Bullet cluster - its overall mass distribution. Models that this cluster should serve as an highly potent lensing system, allowing detection of galaxies at redshifts up to z=7. Moreover, the magnification introduced by the lensing is sufficient that those images should be within the range of state-of-the-art ground-based spectrographs, allowing us to probe the details of star formation at these early epochs. This proposal aims to use ACS to search for the distorted arcs and arclets that characterise lensed images. |
GO 10886: The Sloan Lens ACS Survey: Towards 100 New Strong Lenses