Scattered light in the echelle modes of the Goddard High Resolution Spectrograph aboard the Hubble Space Telescope. II - Analysis of in-flight spectroscopic observations

1993 ◽  
Vol 413 ◽  
pp. 401 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason A. Cardelli ◽  
Dennis C. Ebbets ◽  
Blair D. Savage
2020 ◽  
Vol 159 (3) ◽  
pp. 127
Author(s):  
Peter Zeidler ◽  
Antonella Nota ◽  
Eva K. Grebel ◽  
Elena Sabbi ◽  
Anna Pasquali ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (S319) ◽  
pp. 127-127
Author(s):  
Inger Jørgensen ◽  
Scott Fisher ◽  
Charity Woodrum ◽  
Teiler Kwan ◽  
Jacob Bieker

AbstractWe present results on the stellar populations of bulge-dominated field galaxies at redshifts up to ≈1.0. The sample consists of non-cluster galaxies observed as part of the spectroscopic observations for the Gemini/HST Galaxy Cluster Project (GCP). Our preliminary results show that the bulge-dominated field galaxies contain younger stellar populations than cluster galaxies at similar redshifts. Future work will include photometry from Hubble Space Telescope and will be aimed at establishing the evolution of the sizes and the mass-to-light ratios for the field galaxies.


2003 ◽  
Vol 211 ◽  
pp. 523-524
Author(s):  
Karl Stapelfeldt

The proposed Eclipse Discovery mission is an optical space telescope designed to provide a thousandfold reduction in scattered light near bright stars in comparison to any Hubble Space Telescope instrument. A survey of 500 single stars within 15 pc can detect companions with absolute z magnitude of 22 at separations > 10 AU in most of the targets. Spectrophotometry of CH4 and H2O bands between 0.8-1.0 μm can be used to derive the effective temperatures of the objects. The ECLIPSE brown dwarf survey would directly measure the luminosity function of brown dwarf companions down to ~20 Jupiter masses, providing a crucial comparison with field objects.


1988 ◽  
Vol 132 ◽  
pp. 35-38
Author(s):  
Dennis C. Ebbets ◽  
Sara R. Heap ◽  
Don J. Lindler

The G-HRS is one of four axial scientific instruments which will fly aboard the Hubble Space Telescope (ref 1,2). It will produce spectroscopic observations in the 1050 A ≤ λ ≤ 3300 A region with greater spectral, spatial and temporal resolution than has been possible with previous space-based instruments. Five first order diffraction gratings and one Echelle provide three modes of spectroscopic operation with resolving powers of R = λ/ΔΔ = 2000, 20000 and 90000. Two magnetically focused, pulse-counting digicon detectors, which differ only in the nature of their photocathodes, produce data whose photometric quality is usually determined by statistical noise in the signal (ref 3). Under ideal circumstances the signal to noise ratio increases as the square root of the exposure time. For some observations detector dark count, instrumental scattered light or granularity in the pixel to pixel sensitivity will cause additional noise. The signal to noise ratio of the net spectrum will then depend on several parameters, and will increase more slowly with exposure time. We have analyzed data from the ground based calibration programs, and have developed a theoretical model of the HRS performance (ref 4). Our results allow observing and data reduction strategies to be optimized when factors other than photon statistics influence the photometric quality of the data.


1997 ◽  
Vol 182 ◽  
pp. 355-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Stapelfeldt ◽  
Christopher J. Burrows ◽  
John E. Krist ◽  

We report on Hubble Space Telescope imaging of eleven young stellar objects in the nearby Taurus molecular clouds. The high spatial resolution and stable point spread function of HST reveal important new details of the circumstellar nebulosity of these objects. Three sources (HH 30, FS Tau B, and DG Tau B) are resolved as compact bipolar nebulae without a directly visible star. In all three cases, jet widths near the sources are found to be 50 AU or less. Flattened disk structures are seen in absorption in HH 30 and FS Tau B, and in reflection about GM Aur. Extended envelope structures traced by scattered light are present in HL Tau, T Tau, DG Tau, and FS Tau. The jet in DG Tau exhibits a large opening angle and is already resolved into a bow-like structure less than 3″ from the star.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joe Zalesky ◽  
Michael Line ◽  
Matteo Brogi

<p>High Resolution Cross Correlation Spectroscopy (HRCCS) has become a powerful tool to constrain both the physical characteristics and abundances of atomic/molecular constituents in exoplanetary atmospheres. Brogi & Line (2019) recently introduced a novel Bayesian atmospheric retrieval methodology that can combine observations from both longer wavelength (2-4 micron), ground-based, HRCCS and shorter wavelength (1-2 micron) space-based observatories such as the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Here we present results from the application of this technique to both new and previously published observations of HD209458b and HD189733b from VLT/CRIRES, HST, and Spitzer. The more complete wavelength coverage provides a more comprehensive assessment of the atmosphere by way of stronger constraints on the thermal profiles, atmospheric metallicity, and carbon/oxygen inventory for these two benchmark planets. We also investigate the impact of possible model-induced biases including assumptions regarding molecular cross-sections, cloud model prescriptions, and thermal profile parameterizations. Finally, we present what constraints may be possible in the future by performing retrievals of synthetic observations from the next generation of high-resolution spectrographs like CRIRES+. This work has laid a foundational dataset that combines both space and ground-based observations to comprehensively characterize exoplanetary atmospheres and will be a useful benchmark in comparison to future efforts for both transiting and non-transiting atmospheric characterization.</p>


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