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National Aeronautics and Space Administration Hubble www.nasa.gov Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Science Year in Review This book is a joint project of NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and the Space Telescope Science Institute under contract NAS5-26555. The Space Telescope Science Institute is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., in cooperation with the European Space Agency and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. This recent Hubble image shows bright, blue, newly formed stars whose radiation is blowing a cavity in the center of a star-forming region in our neighboring galaxy, the Small Magellanic Cloud. NP-2007-4-826-GSFC Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Foreward . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Hubble’s History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Observatory Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Operating Hubble . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Hubble News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Science . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Jupiter’s New Red Oval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Binaries (and More) in the Kuiper Belt . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Cepheid Calibration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 The Great Nebula in Orion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Transiting “Hot Jupiters” near the Galactic Center . . . . . . . . . 67 Einstein Rings: Nature’s Gravitational Lenses . . . . . . . . . . 75 A New Population of Active Galactic Nuclei . . . . . . . . . . . 83 Galaxies over the Latter Half of Cosmic Time . . . . . . . . . . 91 Outflows from Active Galactic Nuclei . . . . . . . . . . . . 101 Galactic Jets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Supporting Hubble: Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Coming Attractions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135 Further Reading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145 The Hubble Space Telescope, sporting new solar arrays and other important but less visible new hardware, begins its separation from the Space Shuttle Columbia following its last astronaut servicing call in March 2002. Upgrades have kept the observatory at the cutting edge of astronomical research. Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Inside Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Foreword On October 31, 2006, NASA Administrator Mike Griffin announced his decision to launch a shuttle mission in 2008 to refurbish and upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope. This decision provides the opportunity to significantly increase Hubble’s scientific capability and prolong its life as humankind’s most productive scientific instrument. With successful servicing, Hubble will be at its all-time peak performance, with instruments many times more sensitive than the original set launched with the observatory in 1990. Meanwhile, Hubble continues to produce great science. In 2006, almost 700 peer-reviewed, scientific papers were published using Hubble data—more than in any previous year. Images from the telescope continue to excite and inspire both the layman and the scientist. The 10 science articles selected for this year’s annual science report exemplify the range of Hubble research—from the Solar System, across our Milky Way, and on to distant galaxies. The objects of study include a new feature on Jupiter, binaries in the Kuiper Belt, Cepheid variable stars, the Orion Nebula, distant transiting planets, lensing galaxies, active galactic nuclei, “red-and-dead” galaxies, and galactic outflows and jets. Each narrative strives to construct the reader’s understanding of the topics and issues, and to place the latest research in historical, as well as scientific, context. These essays reveal trends in the practice of astronomy. More powerful computers are permitting astronomers to study everlarger data sets, enabling the discovery of subtle effects and rare objects. (Two investigations created mosaic images that are among the largest produced to date.) Multiwavelength data sets from ground-based telescopes, as well as other great observatories—Spitzer and Chandra—are increasingly important for holistic interpretations of Hubble results. This yearbook also presents profiles of 12 individuals who work with Hubble, or Hubble data, on a daily basis. They are representative of the many students, scientists, engineers, and other professions who are proudly associated with Hubble. Their stories collectively communicate the excitement and reward of careers related to space science and technology. We hope you enjoy this portrait of Hubble’s successful and “sweet sixteenth” year in orbit. The best is yet to come! Left: An exquisite recent Hubble image of the edge-on disk galaxy NGC 5866. Pages 6-7: Opaque, dark knots of gas and dust are seen against the background of a nearby emission nebula known as NCG 281. 5 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Space Telescope will help solve many astronomical puzzles. The greatest excitement, however, will come when the pictures returned from the satellite reveal things no one in this generation of astronomers has dreamed of, phenomena that only the next generation will be privileged to understand. - John N. Bahcall and Lyman Spitzer, Jr., 1982, Scientific American, 247, 40. Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble’s History Hubble’s remarkable mission has now spanned 16 years. During that time, it has been at the nexus of perhaps the most exciting period of discovery in the history of astronomy. At the same time, Hubble has offered up some of the most daunting challenges to humans working in space, and success in meeting those challenges has been among NASA’s greatest triumphs. Since its launch in 1990, Hubble has been visited four times by astronauts to fix, restore, and upgrade its equipment. In nearly constant use between these servicing missions, Hubble has generated data for thousands of scientific papers, on topics ranging from discoveries of solar systems in formation, to precise measurements of the age of the universe. The concept of a large telescope in space is as old as the space program itself. In a classified study in 1946, Lyman Spitzer first articulated the scientific and technical rationale for space astronomy. He continued to be the champion of the dream of a large telescope in space until it was realized. Supported by colleagues John Bahcall, George Field, and others, Spitzer was a tireless advocate within the astronomical community, to the public, and to the Federal Government. The outcome was a “new start” for the mission, authorized by Congress in 1977. The technology needed for the Hubble Space Telescope was well advanced when work began. However, other serious technological and management challenges characterized the tumultuous years of Hubble’s design and manufacture. This turmoil culminated with the tragic loss of Space Shuttle Challenger and its crew in January 1986. Finally, against the backdrop of unrestrained anticipation by the public and the astronomical community alike, NASA launched Hubble into orbit on Space Shuttle Discovery (STS-31) on April 24, 1990. Astronauts train to service Hubble in a huge, water-filled tank that simulates weightlessness. The astronauts wear pressurized suits similar to those they wear in orbit. They spend weeks doing this kind of training, and weeks in class. The astronauts also train using virtual reality, and in a chamber that mimics space temperatures of +200 to –200º F (+93 to –93º C). Here, astronauts practice replacing Hubble’s main computer—a task successfully accomplished during Servicing Mission 3A in December 1999. 8 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble’s first few months were disastrous. Instead of returning crisp, point-like images of stars, its images showed stars surrounded by large, fuzzy halos of light. The source of the problem was traced to an error in constructing the equipment used to test Hubble’s mirror during manufacture. Optical tests using this equipment led technicians to grind the mirror to the wrong shape, giving it a classic case of “spherical aberration.” The mirror was perfectly smooth, but would not focus light to a single point. Hubble was designed to be visited by astronauts. Even before launch, NASA had begun to build a second-generation camera to replace the main camera that was launched with the telescope. Optical experts realized they could build corrective optics into the camera to counteract the flaw in the Hubble mirror. NASA accelerated work on the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2), and Hubble scientists and engineers designed a mechanical fixture called Corrective Optics Space Telecope Axial Replacement (COSTAR) to deploy corrective optics in the light paths to the other instruments. In December 1993, astronauts returned to Hubble and undertook an ambitious set of space walks to install the new equipment. The modifications worked flawlessly, restoring Hubble’s image quality to nearly the original design goals. In the decade following the first servicing mission, Hubble has treated astronomers and the public to the clearest and deepest views of the universe—scenes of profound beauty and intellectual challenge. Thousands of astronomers have used Hubble for boundary-breaking research in virtually all areas, from our own Solar System to the farthest depths of the expanding universe. Three additional servicing missions in 1997, 1999, and 2002 punctuated this era, and a final mission to upgrade and refurbish Hubble is planned for 2008. The 1997 mission brought tremendous improvements to Hubble’s spectroscopic capabilities with the insertion of the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). STIS observations not only demonstrated that black holes are ubiquitous in the centers of galaxies, but also showed that the black hole masses are tightly correlated with the masses of the surrounding ancient stellar population. The 1997 mission also opened Hubble’s view to the near-infrared universe with the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS). The clear views of distant galaxies provided by NICMOS have supplied a wealth of clues to the complex physics in the early universe that led to the formation of the Milky Way. Hubble was integrated at the Lockheed Martin Space Systems facility in Sunnyvale, California, where it appears in this pre-launch image. It is roughly the size of a subway car, 42.5 feet long, and 14 feet wide at its widest point. A close look at this image reveals a portion of the 225 ft. of yellow handrails installed around the outside for astronauts to grip during servicing mission spacewalks. 11 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The servicing mission in 1999 enhanced many of Hubble’s subsystems, including the central computer, a new solid-state data-recording system to replace the aging magnetic tape drives, and the gyroscopes needed for pointing control. A month prior to launch, a gyroscope failure had forced Hubble into “safe mode,” with no ability to observe astronomical targets. When a premature loss of solid-nitrogen coolant cut short NICMOS’s operational life, NASA engineers used innovative mechanical refrigeration technology to develop an alternate way of cooling its detectors to their operating temperature of –320º F. This cooling system was installed in 2002, and it brought the ailing instrument back to life. NICMOS has proved crucial to observations of very distant supernovae used to measure the acceleration of the universe. The 2002 mission also introduced Hubble’s most powerful camera, the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS), providing a tenfold improvement over WFPC2. The final servicing mission in 2008 will install two new instruments, the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) and Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3). COS is the most sensitive ultraviolet spectrograph ever built for Hubble. The instrument will probe the cosmic web—the large-scale structure of the universe—whose form is determined by the gravity of dark matter and is traced by the spatial distribution of galaxies and intergalactic gas. WFC3 is a new camera sensitive across a wide range of wavelengths (colors), including infrared, visible, and ultraviolet light. It will study planets in our Solar System, the formation histories of nearby galaxies, and early and distant galaxies beyond Hubble’s current reach. An attempt will also be made to repair the STIS. Installed in 1997, it stopped working in 2004. When repaired, the instrument will be used for high-resolution studies in visible and ultraviolet light of both nearby star systems and distant galaxies, providing information about the motions and chemical makeup of stars, planetary atmospheres, and other galaxies. Astronauts will also install a refurbished Fine Guidance Sensor to replace one degrading unit of the three already onboard. Two of these sensors are routinely used to enable Hubble’s precise pointing, and the third is available to astronomers for making accurate measurements of stellar positions. The Hubble Space Telescope, operating at the intersection of the robotic and the human space flight programs, embodies both the trials and triumphs of the space program. It has survived controversy, delays, and failures, and has proven to be one of the most powerful and productive scientific tools ever developed. Hubble wasn’t assembled in a day. Neither was this Hubble image of the face-on spiral galaxy Messier 101 (M101). Using the power of the Advanced Camera for Surveys installed during the last servicing mission to the satellite, it is the largest and most detailed photo of a spiral galaxy that has ever been released from Hubble. The galaxy’s portrait is actually composed of 51 individual exposures, in addition to elements from ground-based telescope images. 12 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Hubble Space Telescope Primary mirror Hubble’s primary mirror is made of a special glass coated with aluminum and a special compound that reflects ultraviolet light. It is 2.4-m in diameter and collects the light from stars and galaxies and reflects it to the secondary mirror. FGS Hubble has three Fine Guidance Sensors on board. Two of them are needed to point and lock the telescope on the target and the third can be used for stellar position measurements, also known as astrometry. STIS The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) is currently not operating, but is a versatile multipurpose instrument taking full advantage of modern technology. It combines a camera with a spectrograph and covers a wide range of wavelengths from the nearinfrared region into the ultraviolet. COSTAR The Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement (COSTAR) is not really a science instrument: it is the corrective optics package that replaced the High Speed Photometer (HSP) during the first servicing mission. COSTAR was designed to correct the effects of the primary mirror’s aberration. NICMOS The Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) is an instrument for near-infrared imaging and spectroscopic observations of astronomical targets. NICMOS detects light with wavelengths from 800 to 2500 nm. ACS ACS is a so-called third generation Hubble instrument. Its wide field of view is nearly twice that of Hubble’s previous workhorse camera, WFPC2. The name, Advanced Camera for Surveys, comes from its particular ability to map relatively large areas of the sky in great detail. Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Aperture door Hubble’s aperture door can close if necessary to prevent light from the Sun from entering the telescope. Secondary mirror Like the primary mirror, Hubble’s secondary mirror is made of special glass coated with aluminum and a special compound to reflect ultraviolet light. It is .33-m in diameter and reflects the light back through a hole in the primary mirror and into the instruments. Solar panels Hubble’s third set of solar arrays produces enough power to enable all the science instruments to operate simultaneously, thereby making Hubble even more efficient. The panels are rigid and unlike earlier versions, do not vibrate, making it possible to perform stable, pinpoint-sharp observations. Communication antennae Once Hubble observes a celestial object, its onboard computers convert the image or spectrum into long strings of numbers that, via one of Hubble’s two high-gain antennae, are sent to one of the satellites that form the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS). Support systems Essential support systems such as computers, batteries, gyroscopes, reaction wheels, and electronics are contained in these areas. WFPC2 WFPC2 was Hubble’s workhorse camera until the installation of ACS. It records excellent quality images through a selection of 48 color filters covering a spectral range from far-ultraviolet to visible and near-infrared wavelengths. WFPC2 has produced most of the stunning pictures that have been released as public outreach images over the years. Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Observatory Design About the size and weight of a subway car, Hubble owes much of its design to the legacy of the Cold War, being in many respects a copy of a KH-11 reconnaissance satellite. Hubble is just one of roughly a dozen large telescopes of similar design that have been lofted into orbit—but Hubble was designed to look up, not down. The heart of Hubble is its 2.4-m mirror. While small by the standards of ground-based observatories, this mirror collects about 40,000 times as much light as the human eye, and its location above the distorting effects of the Earth’s atmosphere allows Hubble to obtain very sharp images and view wavelengths of light that do not reach the Earth’s surface. Hubble has an optical layout known as a Ritchie-Chrétien Cassegrain design. The incoming light bounces off the primary mirror, up to a secondary mirror, and back down through a hole in the primary mirror, where it comes to a focus on a set of “pickoff” mirrors that guides the light to the scientific instruments. A graphite-epoxy truss provides a rigid structure for the main optics, and a system of baffles painted flat black is mounted within the telescope to suppress stray or scattered light from the Sun, Moon, or Earth. Hubble is encased in a thin aluminum shell, blanketed by many thin layers of insulation to reduce temperature fluctuations. The telescope itself is housed in the narrower top section of the tube. Most of the control electronics sit in the middle of the telescope, where the tube widens. The middle section also houses Hubble’s four 100-pound reaction wheels. Hubble reorients itself around the sky by exchanging momentum with these spinning flywheels. Astronauts can easily access the devices in Hubble’s midsection, and a number of these have been replaced or upgraded during servicing missions. At the back end of the spacecraft, the “aft shroud” houses the scientific instruments, gyroscopes, star trackers, and other components. All of The Hubble Space Telescope floats against the background of Earth after a week of repair and upgrade by Space Shuttle Columbia astronauts in 2002. Hubble’s fourth servicing mission gave the telescope its first new instrument installed since the 1997 repair mission—the Advanced Camera for Surveys. It has twice the field of view and records information much faster than Hubble’s Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2. 17 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Workers study Hubble’s main, 8 ft. (2.4-m) mirror prior to launch. Its concave shape focuses the light it collects to form an image, which is then examined by Hubble’s instruments. The next great Hubble camera, the Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3), will be the first on Hubble to provide wide–field, high-resolution images at wavelengths from the ultraviolet to the near infrared (200-1700 nm). the spacecraft’s interlocking shells—the light shield, forward shell, equipment section, and aft shroud—provide a benign thermal and physical environment, cloaked in darkness, in which sensitive telescope optics and scientific instruments can operate properly for many years. Excluding the aperture door and solar arrays, Hubble is about 43 ft long and 14 ft in diameter at its widest point. Altogether, it weighs about 25,000 pounds. Hubble’s electrical power comes from two 25-foot-long solar panels, which are mounted like wings on the side of the observatory and rotate to point toward the Sun. Six batteries, charged by solar power when the Sun is overhead, provide power when the Earth blocks the Sun. Astronauts replaced the solar arrays on two occasions during servicing missions. The present arrays are rigid panels of gallium arsenide cells that were originally designed for commercial communications satellites. They are about 30% more efficient in converting sunlight to electricity than the prior arrays. When new, they generated about 5,700 W of electrical power. 18 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review In a single orbit around Earth, the exterior surface of Hubble varies in temperature from –150º F to +200° F. Despite the harsh thermal environment, the interior of Hubble is maintained within a narrow range of temperatures—in many areas at a “comfortable room temperature”—by its thermal control system. Temperature sensors, electric heaters, radiators, insulation inside the spacecraft and on its outer surface, and paints that have special thermal properties all work in concert to minimize the expansion and contraction that could throw the telescope out of focus, and to keep the equipment inside the spacecraft at proper operating temperatures. In addition to guiding the telescope, the fine guidance sensors are used to make very precise measurements of the relative positions of stars, which is essential for estimating distances to nearby stars or masses of components of binary star systems. The aft shroud has room for five scientific instruments. Over the years, NASA and ESA have manufactured 12 scientific instruments for Hubble. Each new generation of instruments has brought enormous improvements to the scientific capabilities of the observatory through advances in technology. Many of Hubble’s discoveries with these new instruments would have been impossible to Hubble was designed to be serviceable. Here astronauts during Servicing Mission 3B (March 2002) install the first of two rigid solar array panels, replacing older, less efficient, flexible ones. achieve with the instruments installed at launch. 19 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Operating Hubble The Sun and Earth rise and set for Hubble two times in three hours, as the spacecraft skims the upper atmosphere at an altitude of 360 miles. The looming Earth blocks half the sky and regularly interrupts most observations by blocking the line of sight to the target. Because Hubble’s slew rate from target to target is only about as fast as the minute hand on a watch, it cannot keep ahead of this game. Nevertheless, careful scheduling keeps Hubble gathering light from stars and galaxies almost 50% of the time. It is the job of Hubble controllers at the Space Telescope Science Institute and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center to seamlessly blend science operations and spacecraft operations 24 hours a day. Scientists and engineers at the Institute translate the research plans of astronomers into detailed sequences of commands for the internal electronics, detectors, and mechanisms of the scientific instruments. The preparations, carried out weeks or months in advance of the observations, also involve selecting guide stars to stabilize the telescope pointing, and specifying the exact sequence and timing of the observations. Spacecraft controllers work together to schedule Hubble’s communication with the ground, to load commands into the onboard computers, to manage the collection of electrical power from solar arrays and batteries, and to curate the data in the onboard computers. The flight operations team at Goddard monitors every system on Hubble to ensure it is working properly. If not, ground controllers can intervene to remedy the problem. Over the past year, Hubble pursued its usual wide range of scientific programs, targeting objects ranging from nearby planets to galaxies billions of light-years away. Among the most technically challenging observations were those aimed at a member of the Solar System, comet Schwassmann-Wachmann 3. Discovered photographically by Arnold Schwassmann and Arno Arthur Wachmann of Hamburg Observatory on May 2, 1930, as it was passing within 6 million miles of Earth, the Hubble has been serviced by astronauts four times. Here, in Servicing Mission 2 (February 1997) they are seen replacing a defective reaction wheel assembly. 21 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review comet has a relatively short orbital period of 5.45 years. The 1995 apparition provided fireworks, as the nucleus broke into four fragments and the comet brightened over hundredfold in a series of outbursts. This display was driven by outgassing from volatiles in the cometary nucleus evaporated by solar heating, rather than external tidal forces imposed by the Sun or Jupiter. In 2001, two components of Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 were still visible. In preparation for its return in 2006, a team of astronomers led by Phillippe Lamy of Laboratoire d’Astronomie Spatiale in France and Harold Weaver of the Johns Hopkins University, put together a proposal to use the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) on Hubble to obtain detailed multicolor images of the disintegrating nucleus. The proposal was submitted to the Institute in January 2006, along with hundreds of other Phase I proposals from around the world requesting Hubble observing time. Flight controllers at the Goddard Space Telescope Operations Control Center located in Greenbelt, Maryland, monitor the health and safety of the Hubble satellite around the clock. Commands are typically sent in groups to the telescope, where they are stored onboard for later execution. 22 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Two important Hubble simulators are located in the large “high-bay” area of Building 29 at the Goddard Space Flight Center. The Vehicle Electrical System Test (VEST) unit in the foreground electrically simulates the many complex components of the satellite. The High Fidelity Mechanical Simulator located behind it is used for “fit checks” of new hardware (such as instruments or gyroscopes) and for astronaut training. In a process used in the 13 previous cycles, proposals were carefully reviewed by a peer committee of other scientists in the Hubble Cycle 14 time allocation process. The Lamy-Weaver proposal was awarded nine orbits. Working with scientists at the Institute, the team then developed a Phase II proposal, which specified the exact sequence of color filters, exposure times, and positions to catch the comet near its closest approach to Earth—four tenths of the distance between Earth and the Sun. For most observations, Hubble locks on distant “guide” stars in its Fine Guidance Sensors to steady itself as it takes exposures. Because Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 was moving against the background stars, Hubble had to continuously reorient itself to track the comet, changing guide stars, and sometimes relying on just a single guide star. 23 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Schwassmann-Wachmann 3 proved to be unexpectedly active, and a major outburst developed as it approached the prime viewing zone. Consequently, the team applied to the Institute director and received an additional allocation of his discretionary time to obtain more coverage of the unfolding events. Hubble observations are scheduled on a weekly basis. Individual observations are coded as a series of commands that are uplinked and stored onboard Hubble, instructing the telescope where to point, acquire guide stars, and initiate exposure sequences with specific instruments. The first nine orbits of exposure time were obtained over April 10–11, 2006. The follow-on observations occurred on April 18–20. The images were temporarily stored in solid-state memory within Hubble and then downlinked via a NASA communications satellite to a ground terminal in White Sands, New Mexico. From there, the data were transferred to Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and then to the Institute in Baltimore, where the images were stored in the Hubble data archive. At the same time, an automatic e-mail message was sent to the Principal Investigators, informing them that the images were available as fully processed images, reduced using the standard calibration pipeline, and as raw images for customized processing, if desired. Hubble data is transmitted to Earth through a NASA relay satellite which downlinks it to a ground station in White Sands, NM. From there, it is forwarded to Goddard Space Flight Center for initial processing and quality checking. Within minutes it is sent to the Space Telescope Science Institute, where it is further processed, archived, and made available to the Principal Investigator who successfully proposed the observation. 24 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Schwassman-Wachmann 3 observations showed that the cometary nucleus had degenerated into a chain of more than three dozen small fragments. Hubble had provided a ringside seat—and a wealth of detail inaccessible to ground-based telescopes—for the demise of a disintegrating comet. Moving well beyond the Solar System, Hubble observations continue to play a crucial role in probing the cosmic flow of galaxies, finding evidence for a mysterious dark energy that pervades the universe. Type Ia supernovae have emerged as “standard candles,” enabling measurements of large cosmic distances and providing a basis for observational cosmology. Triggered by the disruption of compact white dwarf stars in binary systems, these supernovae are vast explosions that, at their brightest, outshine a galaxy. Because these events are unpredictable and relatively short lived, astronomers must adopt clever strategies to detect them and measure their brightness variations to determine their distance. Saul Perlmutter, at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, and Adam Riess, at the Institute and the Johns Hopkins University, have been using the ACS to survey distant galaxies for suitable supernovae. These programs require particularly intense data analysis, because supernovae fade on timescales of days. Typically, the wide-field ACS observations are taken from the archive, processed, and thoroughly scrutinized for new supernovae within 24–36 hours of their being taken. This rapid turnaround is essential to allow follow-up observations with the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer (NICMOS) before the supernova fades into obscurity. The NICMOS observations, added to the observing schedule over the next 1–3 weeks as target-of-opportunity observations, map the decline in the supernova’s brightness—its “light curve.” The shape of that light curve allows Hubble to Hubble provided astronomers with extraordinary views of comet 73P/Schwassmann-Wachmann 3. The fragile comet rapidly disintegrated as it approached the Sun. Hubble images uncovered many more fragments than were reported by ground-based observers. These observations facilitate the opportunity to study in detail the demise of a comet nucleus. measure the distances accurately enough to reveal the acceleration of the universe at great cosmic distances. 25 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble News Hubble observations have produced a regular stream of news about the universe. Shown here are a few recent highlights. Details on these topics and many others can be found on the World Wide Web at http://hubblesite.org. Recently discovered supernovae in distant galaxies support the theory that an unknown, i.e., “dark” energy has influenced the universe for at least the last 9 billion years. Using the light from the supernovae as “standard candles,” astronomers have measured the relative size of the universe over time and derived its expansion rate. This, in turn, helps in describing the forces at work controlling the expansion. Intricate wisps of glowing gas float amid a myriad of stars in this Hubble image of the supernova remnant, N132D. The ejected material shows that roughly 3,000 years have passed since the supernova blast. This titanic explosion took place in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a neighboring galaxy some 160,000 light-years away. 27 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review (Opposite Page, Top Left) NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope has uncovered what astronomers are reporting as the dimmest stars ever seen in any globular star cluster (shown circled in the right-hand panels). Globular clusters are spherical concentrations of hundreds of thousands of stars within a galaxy. The cluster NGC 6397 is one of the closest globular clusters to Earth. Seeing the whole range of stars in this area will yield insights into the age, origin, and evolution of the cluster. (Left) Dark matter and normal matter have been wrenched apart by the tremendous collision of two large clusters of galaxies. Hot gas detected by Chandra in x-rays is seen as two pink clumps in the image and contains most of the “normal” matter in the two clusters. The blue areas are the regions where the dark matter is clumped—as determined by the study of the distorted (gravitationally lensed) galaxy shapes in these areas. (Right) Precision measurements taken over a seven-year period of the positions of core stars within the globular cluster 47 Tucanae have confirmed that gravitational segregation by mass is occurring within the cluster. The heavier stars are slowing down and sinking to the cluster’s core, while the lighter stars are picking up speed and moving to its periphery. 28 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review 980703 990705 990712 000926 020903 030329 Gamma-Ray Burst Host Galaxies Hubble Space Telescope NASA, ESA, A. Fruchter (STScI), and the GOSH Collaboration (Top Right) Long-duration gamma-ray bursts are powerful flashes of high-energy radiation that are sometimes seen coming from certain types of supernovae. If Earth were hit by such a nearby burst, the devastation could range from destroying the ozone in our atmosphere to triggering climate change. These images are a sampling of the host galaxies of long-duration bursts taken by Hubble. Astronomers analyzing these surveys have concluded that our Milky Way galaxy is an unlikely place for them to occur. The green crosshairs pinpoint the location of the gamma-ray bursts, now long faded away. (Left) These dark, opaque knots of gas and dust are called “Bok globules.” They are absorbing light in the center of the nearby emission nebula and star-forming region, NGC 281. These images were taken with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. NGC 281 is located nearly 9,500 light-years away in the direction of the constellation Cassiopeia. 29 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review STScI-PRC06-20 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Science Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Jupiter’s New “Red Oval” Imke de Pater, Philip Marcus, & Michael Wong Jupiter has superlative visual appeal and scientific interest. Its size and intricate features—including multicolored bands and spots—have fascinated astronomers and the public for as long as telescopes have delivered Jupiter’s disk to the eye. The telescopic view is of cloud tops over a fathomless atmosphere, with no palpable surface beneath. The bands are jet streams, which travel east and west at various rates. The spots are giant swirling storms, located in the turbulent boundaries between jet streams. These storms are unlike any on Earth; they are not driven by the heat of oceans, like hurricanes, nor by unstable weather fronts, like tornadoes. Instead, they are driven directly by Jupiter’s jet streams. Because those jet streams persist indefinitely—unlike the transitory ocean temperatures or warm and cold fronts on Earth—the Jovian storms can persist for decades or centuries, and perhaps much longer. Astronomers study such storms on Jupiter to test their theories of weather, atmospheric circulation, and climate change. Sometimes Jupiter shows them an unexpected and potentially instructive event, as when a new red spot was discovered in 2006. No feature on Jupiter has the strong identity and established longevity of the Great Red Spot. For centuries, astronomers have chronicled its changing position, shape, and size using the best technology of the day: sketchpads, photographs, and, most recently, digital images from Hubble, as well as from ground-based observatories, deep-space probes, and even the backyard telescopes of myriad amateur astronomers. Until recently, the Great Red Spot was the only one of its kind. Now, it has a likeness: a second red spot, gliding along just to its south. This new feature is so young that its name is still unsettled—“Redspot Jr.,” “Oval BA,” and “Red Oval” are current contenders. Unlike the Great Red Spot, whose provenance is lost in astronomical prehistory, the origin and evolution of the Red Oval were well observed from the start. In the late 1930s, astronomers saw the white horizontal band just south of the Great Red Spot break up into three elongated features. In the 1940s, these features contracted into three giant, counterclockwise, Pages 30–31: Data from two Hubble instruments (the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and the Advanced Camera for Surveys) are combined in this spectacular image of the planet Saturn. The blue light encircling the pole is Saturn’s equivalent of the Earth’s aurora borealis. Left: Jupiter’s new red oval is seen toward left of center in this Hubble image. Its more famous cousin, the Great Red Spot, is partially seen farther to the right. The formation of the new oval, which is approximately the size of Earth, is described in this article. 33 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Jupiter’s Great Red Spot and new Red Oval as observed by Hubble on April 8, 2006 (left) and April 16, 2006 (right). swirling storms, which were named “White Ovals.” Filamentary clouds developed in each of the three gaps between the White Ovals. Later, it became apparent that each of the filamentary clouds was associated with a clockwise storm. (This association was difficult for scientists to make, because the Great Red Spot and the White Ovals had led them to expect that Jupiter’s storm clouds would be bright, compact and oval, not extended and wispy.) These clockwise storms were arranged with respect to the White Ovals as the storm C is with respect to storms A1 and A2 in the second sidebar figure on page 39, that is, each White Oval became separated from its neighboring White Oval by one of these storms. In the following decades, the three White Ovals shared the same latitude, but they were usually widely separated in longitude. Indeed, they seemed to repel each other when they came too close (but were, in fact, repelled by one of the intervening clockwise storms). Around 1996, a pair of White Ovals bunched up, trapping one of the clockwise storms between them. This trio paraded eastward for months, seemingly a bound unit. In 1998, the two White Ovals in the group merged into one storm, which in spring 2000, merged with the other remaining White Oval. Shortly after that, the solo White Oval became notably rounder than any of its progenitors or the Great Red Spot. 34 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review On February 24, 2006, Filipino amateur astronomer Christopher Go alerted the Association of Lunar and Planetary Observers that the solo White Oval had changed color to red. The news swept through the community of amateur and professional Jupiter watchers, who quickly confirmed the finding. Shortly thereafter, the Director of the Space Telescope Science Institute approved two requests for observations by Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys to obtain a sequence of images at several wavelengths of the Great Red Spot and the new Red Oval. Astronomers generally agree that the whiteness of Jupiter’s white features is due to ammonia ice. Surprisingly, no one knows for certain what causes the redness of the Great Red Spot and the Red Oval. The most likely cause is a coloring agent or “chromophore” contaminating the ice particles in the clouds. In the 1970s, atmospheric chemists proposed that Jupiter’s red chromophore originates with phosphine gas, PH3, a colorless, flammable, poisonous gas. Astronomers had detected PH3 on Jupiter, and the Cassini spacecraft, which flew by Jupiter September 18, 1997 July 16, 1998 FA DE BC FA BE October 14, 1999 FA September 2, 2000 BE BA Merger sequence of the three original White Ovals. In the late 1930s, these latitudes became white—completely around the planet—perhaps because they became clouded over. Shortly after, the white strip was pinched at six points, which were labeled A to F. These pinches broadened until they created separate sections, which were labeled by their end points: FA, BC, and DE. During the 1940s, these sections shrank in longitude until they formed ovals. In 1998, BC and DE merged, forming BE. In 2000, BE merged with FA, forming White Oval BA, which changed color in late 2005 or early 2006, and now merits the name Red Oval. 35 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review 892 nm - Methane 550 nm - Visible Light 330 nm - Ultraviolet Family portrait of the Great Red Spot and the Red Oval obtained by Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys on April 24, 2006. The red-green-blue composite image was constructed from individual exposures through filters at nominal wavelengths 892 nm (“red,” methane absorption), 550 nm (“green,” visible light), and 330 nm (“blue,” ultraviolet light). The brightness of the two storms in the absorption band of methane indicates less light is lost going in through the atmosphere to the cloud top and back out than going to the clouds surrounding the storm and back out. In other words, the tops of the clouds in the storms are significantly higher than those of the surrounding clouds. (The black protrusion is an instrumental artifact.) 36 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review in late 2000, found it to be more abundant above the Great Red Spot than at other locations. In this theory, ultraviolet light from the Sun helps convert PH3 to the chromophore, which is the red form of the phosphorous molecule P4. Other scientists have challenged this theory, saying that phosphine is more likely to react with the methane and ammonia in Jupiter’s atmosphere to form other compounds. More recent studies suggest that the chromophore is pure sulfur in the form of various chain- or ring-molecules, which vary in color from red to yellow. In this theory, the source of sulfur is particles of ammonium hydrosulfide, NH4SH. Vertical winds in the Great Red Spot and Red Oval would loft the NH4SH particles high enough for ultraviolet light to break them up, and subsequent chemical reactions would produce the long molecules of liberated sulfur atoms. Assuming that a chromophore is implicated in the color change from White Oval to Red Oval, there are at least three possibilities for why the change occurred—including some combinations of the three. First, the cloud top of the White Oval could have initially been below the level of a chromophore in a higher atmospheric layer, but then the cloud top rose, permitting mixing, interaction, contamination, and color change. Second, the storm could have become more efficient in dredging up the coloring agent (or its antecedents) from a deep layer, increasing its abundance in the cloud tops. Third, a temperature change at the latitude of the Ovals could have increased the abundance of the chromophore, because the chemical reactions producing it are expected to depend strongly on the ambient temperature. All three possibilities are consistent with a conjecture by one of the authors (PM) that Jupiter is entering a period of climate change precipitated by the merging of the three White Ovals. “Climate” means the global distribution of temperature. Before the mergers, astronomers had observed that Jupiter’s cloud-top temperatures were nearly the same at all latitudes, even though the Sun deposits much more heat at the equator than at the poles. This observation implies an efficient mechanism to transport heat away from the equator, which, if blocked, could cause the temperature at the poles to fall by 10º C or more. 37 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Simulations of Merging Storms Using computers, scientists can simulate the fluid dynamics of Jupiter’s atmosphere, including the effects of rotation, gravity, and gas physics. One goal is to provide a qualitative understanding of merging storms. The simplest simulation involves giant, counterclockwise, swirling storms in a row, at the same latitude, between two opposite jet streams. In general, such storms will move with the local jet velocity, which here, midway between the jets and at the initial latitude of the storms, is zero. If left undisturbed, this initial situation would not change: the storms would maintain their separations and not merge. This situation is fundamentally unstable, however, because the smallest perturbation will lead to a merger. In the first panel, if the storm A2 moves slightly upward in latitude, it is carried to the left in longitude by the jet stream above it, following the dashed path. The opposite displacement of A1 produces the opposite effect. The separation between A1 and A2 becomes less than a storm’s diameter within weeks. After that, the A1 and A2 quickly merge into a single storm—“A12,” using the nomenclature of the White Ovals. This result is contrary to the observations that giant, counterclockwise, swirling storms on Jupiter can persist for many decades. If two plausible features are added to the simulations, the merger of A1 and A2 can be prevented. The first is a giant, clockwise, swirling storm C above A1 and A2, like was observed above BE and FA in the period 1996–1998. The second new feature is a bend in the jet stream below A1 and A2, like the waves often observed in the Earth’s jet stream. Such bends have been observed corralling storms. Simulations show that this configuration of storms and jet streams is stable for long periods of time, with the positions of the storms oscillating around a neutral point. For example, if storm A2 is perturbed upward, the jet stream above it moves it left, as before, but then it is carried downward by the clockwise flow around C, until the bottom jet stream moves it right again, and the upward swing of the bend brings it back to its original position. The position of storm C is constrained less strongly than A1 and A2. A minor perturbation, such as a collision with a rogue storm, can dislodge it from its position. In that case, simulations show that A1 and A2 quickly come into contact and merge. 38 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Numerical calculations show that the stirring action of the three large, counterclockwise, vigorously spinning storms could easily account for the needed heat transport—but that a solitary White (or Red) Oval could not. The earliest effects of blocking the heat transport system in 1998–2000 were predicted in 2001 to start becoming visible in 2006, taking into account a time lag for the atmospheric temperature to respond to the change in heating. Some of the more striking predictions were large waves on the jet streams and the formation of new storms, which would be eminently detectable by Hubble. These new features have not yet been observed, so it is an open question whether the color change of the new Red Oval was a random local event with no wider ramifications, or whether it was a consequence of blocked heat transport and therefore, a harbinger of more changes to come. Hubble’s watchful eye on Jupiter should help settle this question. The Hubble Space Telescope is the premier observatory for observing unexpected phenomena on Jupiter—like the crash with Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 in 1994 and the color change of the White Oval observed in 2006. No other telescope offers the same combination of synoptic perspective with the ability to capture exquisite detail over a wide range of wavelengths. These unsurpassed qualities have allowed astronomers to witness rare events and obtain unique data records of the highest quality, which will advance understanding of the ever changing and always intriguing Jupiter. Page 40: The ever changing cloud patterns of the giant planet Jupiter are the subject of this article. This Hubble image shows the planet’s trademark belts and zones of high- and low-pressure regions in crisp detail. Careful study of these features results in a better understanding of planetary atmospheres—including our own. 39 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Imke de Pater is a Professor in the Department of Astronomy and Department of Earth and Planetary Science at the University of California at Berkeley. She started her career observing and modeling Jupiter’s synchrotron radiation, and later, she studied the planet’s thermal radio emission. In 1994, she led a worldwide observing campaign on the impact of comet D/Shoemaker-Levy 9 with Jupiter. Currently, she uses adaptive optics in the infrared range to obtain high angular resolution data on a variety of planetary phenomena, including volcanoes on Io, weather on Titan, planetary rings, and Jupiter’s new Red Oval. She and Jack Lissauer wrote the graduatelevel book, Planetary Sciences. Professor de Pater was a Carolyn Herschel Distinguished Visitor at the Space Telescope Science Institute in 2006. Philip Marcus is a Professor of Fluid Dynamics in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of California at Berkeley. He has a long-standing interest in the theory, modeling, and numerical simulation of the dynamics of Jupiter’s atmosphere, including its Great Red Spot and long-term climatic change. His other astrophysical interests include the dynamics of fluids and dust in the formation of stars and planets. His overarching goal is to understand how the fundamental physics of turbulence, chaos, and nonlinear dynamics, which are inherent to fluid dynamics, operate in astrophysical phenomena. To complement his theoretical and computational analyses, he works closely with laboratory experimentalists, often co-designing laboratory experiments that test or elucidate basic astrophysical processes involving fluid flows. Mike Wong is a Research Scientist in the Department of Astronomy at the University of California at Berkeley. His interest in cloud-forming gases in Jupiter’s atmosphere began with analyzing data from the mass spectrometer on the Galileo probe. Later, he participated with the investigator team for the Composite Infrared Spectrometer on Cassini in the discovery of the signature of ammonia ice in Jupiter’s thermal spectrum. With Franck Marchis, he discovered the first moonlet binary among the Trojan asteroids, a large group of objects that share the orbit of Jupiter around the Sun. 41 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Binaries (and More) in the Kuiper Belt Keith Noll The Kuiper Belt is a broad ring of small planetary objects outside Neptune’s orbit, or over 30 times Earth’s distance from the Sun. Astronomers believe that the original planet-forming disk around the young Sun extended out into this region. But here, the disk would not have cleared as in the interior region, where the rubble of planet building was swept up by collisions, or cast away by gravitational perturbations as the major planets formed. For years, the Kuiper Belt was a hypothetical entity, comprising Pluto but no other known objects. Then, starting in 1992, with the advent of a new generation of sensitive digital detectors, astronomers began looking deeper and discovering many “trans-neptunian objects” (TNOs). The number is over 1000 in 2006, the same year the International Astronomical Union redefined Pluto as a “dwarf planet” and signified it the prototypical large TNO. Among the most intriguing and instructive TNOs are the gravitationally bound “trans-neptunian binaries” (TNBs), which include an astonishingly high fraction of all TNOs. (Two TNBs are multiple systems with additional members.) The unsurpassed imaging power of the Hubble Space Telescope is playing a key role in finding, characterizing, and ultimately understanding the enigmatic TNBs. The first TNB was Pluto: its large satellite, Charon, was discovered in 1978. A true binary, the pair orbits a point—the center of mass—that lies outside both bodies. In 2006, Hubble found two smaller moons outside Charon’s orbit, making this system even more fascinatingly complex. It is remarkably well ordered: the orbits are circular and lie in a common plane. As one possible way to explain this system, astronomers speculate that Pluto was originally single, but experienced a huge collision early in the history of the Solar System. Debris from the collision was incorporated into the satellites, whose orbits gradually circularized by tidal forces and evolved to their current sizes. (This is also the leading scenario for the formation of Earth’s Moon.) This hypothetical origin, if correct, puts Pluto in the minority of known TNBs. This is an artist’s impression of noontime on Sedna, the farthest known planetoid from the Sun. Over 8 billion miles away, the Sun is reduced to a brilliant pinpoint of light that is 100 times brighter than the full Moon. The Sun would actually be the angular size of Saturn as seen from Earth—far too small to be resolved with the human eye. (Illustration credit: NASA, ESA , and A. Schaller.) 43 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Pluto system is revealed to be an unexpectedly complex multiple system in this image from Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. Pluto and Charon, the two brightest objects in the image orbit around a common center of mass that lies between them, a distinction that sets them apart from any previously known Solar System pair, but which they share in common with the bulk of trans-neptunian binaries. The two smaller satellites, Nix (closer to Pluto/Charon) and Hydra, were unseen in the glare of Pluto and Charon until imaged by Hubble. They are in co-planar and nearly circular orbits around the common center of mass. 44 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The second TNB was 1998 WW31. The primary object was found in 1998, and its companion was first detected in 2000. Observations by Hubble helped determine the orbit, which has maximum physical separation of 44,000 km, high orbital elongation (eccentricity = 0.82), and a period of 520 days. Using basic physics, astronomers can use the measured orbit size and period to compute the total mass of 1998 WW31—one six-thousandth the mass of the Pluto/Charon system, which is too low to have circularized the orbit of the companion at the observed separation over the age of the Solar System. In 2003, astronomers used Hubble for the first unbiased search for TNBs. “Unbiased” means that the sample was selected without favoring any attribute that might be related to multiplicity, in order to ensure that the findings would be a fair estimate of the occurrence of multiplicity in the general population of TNOs. The pictures from Hubble were scanned not only for clearly resolved companions (three were found), but also for subtle distortions of the TNO images that might be caused by an unresolved companion. (This extension beyond the normal limits of a telescope’s resolution is possible because of the exceptional stability of the Hubble observatory.) In this way, six more TNBs were found, for a total of 9 out of a sample of 81 TNOs investigated. The best estimate—that about 11% of TNOs are multiple systems—is a lower limit, because the search could only have detected the subset of companions that were sufficiently bright and well separated to be found at the time of the observations. That left many beyond the range of detection, which suggests that the true fraction of multiple systems is substantially larger. The discoveries have accumulated rapidly. As of 2006, a total of 34 TNBs are known, of which Hubble discovered 26. Mutual orbits have been determined for nine systems, eight based on Hubble observations of the separation and orientation of the components at different times. The orbits show a large diversity in diameter, eccentricity, and period. The shortest period so far is 6.4 days for the Pluto/Charon system; 2001 QT297 has the longest period, 825 days. For observers, the key constraint is angular separation. In the most widely separated system, 2001 QW322, the components appeared to be separated by 4 arc seconds at the time of discovery; the smallest detected separation has come from Hubble, about 50 milliarc seconds. (At the typical distance of a TNB, about 40 times the radius of Earth’s orbit, 1 arc second corresponds to 29,000 km.) Theoretical studies indicate no reason to suspect a lower limit to the physical separations of TNBs, and the large-amplitude, long-period brightness variations of one TNO—2001 QG298—suggests it is one of a potentially significant population (~10–20%) of binaries so close they are nearly in contact. 45 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Naming the Worlds Beyond Neptune There are few issues that can spark a more spirited debate than what to name newly discovered objects in the Solar System. The naming process starts with a temporary designation by the Minor Planet Center (MPC). The MPC organizes and disseminates preliminary observational data needed to pin down the orbit, which is essential for the long-term study of newly found objects. The temporary designation comprises the year of discovery (four digits), the half-month interval within that year (one letter, skipping “I”), and a unique alphanumeric code for each object found in the two-week period. This code starts with A, runs through Z (again skipping “I”), and then repeats with an appended, subscripted number that increments each time the letter is used. For example, the temporary designation 2005 FY9 refers to the 249th—9 x 25 + 24—new object reported to the MPC in the period March 16–31, 2005. Typically, observations over a couple of years improve knowledge of an orbit to the point that the future position of the object can be predicted within some acceptable limits of uncertainty. At that point, the object is ready for a permanent serial number, which by convention, is written in parentheses. The number of small Solar System bodies with such good orbits is now in the hundreds of thousands. (For example, the object 2005 FY9 is now numbered 136472.) The permanent number is a signal to astronomers that an object is now a well-established member of the Solar System. It is interesting to note that approximately half of the trans-neptunian objects (TNOs) given temporary designations are now “lost,” meaning that the initial estimates of their orbits were not sufficiently accurate to permit relocating them in follow-up observations, if, indeed, any such observations were ever attempted. These objects will not receive a permanent designation unless and until they are rediscovered at a future date. Once an object is permanently numbered, it is eligible for naming. The International Astronomical Union is responsible for the naming of astronomical objects, a mandate carried out for TNOs by its Committee on Small Body Nomenclature. This group has established several naming conventions for TNOs. All must be named for mythological characters. Objects in resonances with Neptune (the ratio of orbital periods is equal to a ratio of two integers), like Pluto, are to be named for characters from underworld myths. Objects in low-inclination, low-eccentricity orbits are named for characters from creation myths. Objects orbiting between Jupiter and Neptune are named for the hybrid Centaurs. A recent extension of this convention calls for using the names of other mythological hybrid creatures for objects that cross the orbits of both Neptune and Saturn. With many of the more familiar names from Greek and Roman mythologies already in use, a rush has begun on names from the rich mythology of the wider world; (90377) Sedna, named for the Inuit goddess of the sea, is an example of this trend. 46 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review This illustration shows two different kinds of orbits on vastly different scales. The orbit around the Sun of the trans-neptunian binary 1998 WW31 is shown as the light-red ellipse, which extends beyond Neptune and Pluto into the swarm of more distant icy bodies known as the Kuiper Belt. The inset illustrates the mutual orbit of the two components of the 1998 WW31 binary (for convenience, the position of the larger, brighter member of the pair is shown as fixed). From the orbit, the mass of the binary pair can be derived using classical physics. The image on the right of 1999 OJ4, taken with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys, shows that this object is, in fact, a previously unresolved pair of nearly equal-sized objects in orbit around each other. Their small separation and faintness require Hubble’s unique combination of capabilities to see them. For six of the nine systems with known orbits, the total mass has been determined with an uncertainty of 10% or better. Measured masses range from a low of six-millionths the mass of the Moon for (58534) Logos/Zoe to 0.2 lunar masses for Pluto/Charon. As further research clarifies the occurrence rate and dynamical characteristics of trans-neptutian binaries (TNBs), and as theoretical models are developed to interpret the results, we can anticipate a profound contribution to our understanding of conditions and processes in the original protoplanetary disk. Massive collisions may have formed a few of the largest multiple systems, like Pluto and 2003 EL61. Page 48: Hubble performed the first direct measurement of a KBO’s size by imaging the distant object known as Quaoar (presented here in an artist’s concept). This icy world is approximately half the size of Pluto, making it one of the larger Kuiper Belt Objects recently discovered. 47 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Nevertheless, the nearly equal size of components in TNBs suggests that the vast majority cannot have formed from collisions. On the other hand, the direct, collisionless capture of a single similar-mass companion by a solo TNO is impossible under the laws of orbital mechanics. Thus, most TNBs must have formed through multibody, gravitational encounters. For either collisions or capture to have produced the number of binaries being found, a much denser environment than the current Kuiper Belt is required: an environment like that thought to exist in the disk surrounding the infant Sun. In other words, the TNBs are primordial, dating back to the first few million or tens of million years after the Sun began to form. Since then, TNBs are slowly being destroyed by rare gravitational encounters, which can also change their orbits around the Sun—but no new TNBs can have formed. We can see hints of this slow depletion in the results of the 2003 survey. Comparing two subsets of TNOs—those that have or have not been scattered out of the plane of the Kuiper Belt—the occurrence rate of binarity is significantly higher for TNOs still in the plane (unperturbed orbits). In less than 15 years, the Kuiper Belt has advanced from a hypothesis to a rich field of observational and theoretical research. It is telling us about the earliest days of the Solar System, and about events we can only hope to observe directly in analogous structures around young nearby stars. Hubble is at the forefront of both avenues of research. Keith Noll is an Astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, Maryland. He is interested in that part of the universe to which his great-grandchildren might someday travel. For the past five years, he has been studying the fascinating and complex objects that lie beyond Neptune with the Hubble Space Telescope. 49 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Cepheid Calibration Fritz Benedict One of the sterling accomplishments of the Hubble Space Telescope has been its measurement of the “Hubble constant.” Named after Edwin Hubble, who in 1929 discovered that the universe is expanding, the Hubble constant characterizes the present-day expansion rate of the universe and is required to determine its age. In practice, measurement of the Hubble constant is extraordinarily difficult—Edwin Hubble’s initial estimate was off by about 600%. During most of the last century, astronomers could not agree to within about a factor of two. Hubble Space Telescope observations in the late 1990s narrowed the range of uncertainty to about 10%. Today, one of astronomy’s greatest challenges is to reduce the uncertainty to about 5%. The quest for a precise estimate of the universe’s expansion rate is not just an academic exercise. Knowing its exact value can help astronomers distinguish between different theories for “dark energy,” a mysterious pressure that counteracts gravity and pushes galaxies apart at an accelerating rate. Two separate teams of astronomers discovered dark energy in 1998, using Hubble and ground-based observatories to make careful measurements of the brightness of distant exploding stars. This was one of the most surprising and profound discoveries of the 20th century. In an odd twist, pursuing this discovery has astronomers pointing Hubble at some bright, nearby stars. As a class, Cepheid variables are the most useful stars in the sky. They are named for their archetype, δ Cephei, the fourth brightest star in the constellation Cepheus—although the most familiar Cepheid variable is the North Star. Cepheids vary in brightness, with periods from a few days to about two months. They moved to center stage in astronomy in 1908, when Henrietta Leavitt discovered a mathematical relationship between their period and their intrinsic brightness. Since then, astronomers have employed Cepheids as “standard candles” for measuring cosmic distances. Present among the thousands of stars seen by Hubble in this close-up of our neighboring galaxy, the Large Magellanic Cloud, are a few whose brightness varies rhythmically over a period of days to weeks. These variable stars provide an important key to unlocking the correct scale of the universe, as this article explains. 51 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The apparent brightness of a light source varies inversely as the square of its distance. In other words, if the distance between an observer and a light source is doubled, the light source will appear four times as faint to the observer. Astronomers can use this inverse square law to estimate distances. The difficulty lies in making the first step: finding a good standard candle—a class of sources that vary in apparent brightness only due to changes in distance. For years after Leavitt’s discovery, astronomers could only use Cepheids as uncalibrated standard candles, because no Cepheid had been assigned an accurate distance until fairly recently. Even so, Cepheids were immediately useful for measuring relative distance. For example, in the early 1920s, when Edwin Hubble discovered Cepheids in the Andromeda nebula that were about 100 times fainter than their counterparts in the Small Magellanic Clouds, he could infer that they were 10 times farther away—and far beyond the most generous estimates of the limits of our Milky Way galaxy at that time. That result ended the debate about whether the Milky Way constituted the entire universe, or was just one of many galaxies. Henceforth, the proper title for Andromeda was “galaxy,” not “nebula.” Because Cepheids are such good standard candles—the stars are bright and Leavitt’s relation is quite exact—astronomers strive to calibrate them to the highest possible accuracy, and to investigate any possible sources of error when using them to measure distances. The absolute calibration of Cepheids calls for triangulating the distances to as many nearby Cepheids as possible. Astronomical triangulation involves observing a star at different times of the year, and measuring its displacement relative to more distant stars. Its apparent position changes because we view it at different angles as Earth moves around the Sun. The apparent displacement of a star when viewed from opposite sides of Earth’s orbit is its “annual parallax.” When a star is 1 parsec (3.26 light-years) away, its annual parallax is 1 arc second. (One arc second is roughly the diameter of a dime, viewed from a distance of two miles.) With its superb resolving power, Hubble can resolve individual stars in distant galaxies. In the magnificent spiral galaxy NGC 3370, 98 million light-years away, individual Cepheid variable stars were identified and studied. 52 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Henrietta Leavitt: Timeless Contributions Sometimes a great advance in science is achieved through selfless work performed by a modest person not striving for recognition on the stage of history. Such was the contribution of Henrietta Leavitt, one of many female “computers” working at the Harvard College Observatory for small hourly wages. Her years of patiently studying astronomical photographs—from 1893 until her death in 1921—culminated in finding the missing link for measuring cosmic distance: the period-luminosity relation of Cepheid variable stars. Leavitt’s job at the observatory was to measure the brightness of stars on photographic plates from Harvard’s telescopes in Massachusetts and abroad. Her product was a record of results comprising the identity of each star based on its position, and the star’s brightness on the date of the observation, which she determined by comparing the star’s tiny photographic image with those of other stars. She performed this exacting task year after year in pursuit of various projects for Edward Pickering, the observatory director. Leavitt was asked to take special note of any stars that varied in brightness, which a small fraction do, although the various reasons for such fluctuations were not known at the time. Until she began finding them on plates from Peru of the Small Magellanic Cloud, all variable stars were at unknown distances, beyond the reach of triangulation. Even though the distance to the Small Magellanic Cloud was also unknown, it could be assumed that all the variable stars found there were at approximately the same distance. In that case, all these stars had the same (unknown) ratio of apparent brightness to true brightness. Therefore, observed ratios of apparent brightness between the stars could be interpreted as ratios of true brightness, independent of the observer. At the end of her report in the Annals of the Astronomical Observatory of Harvard College, Leavitt wrote of 16 particular stars, “It is worthy of notice that in Table VI the brighter variables have the longer periods.” These were the Cepheid variable stars, and she had found that the brighter the Cepheid, the longer the period of its variation. What a discovery! Astronomers have relied on it ever since to measure distances to remote galaxies. Once the distance to a few nearby Cepheids was measured by parallax—making the relationship between period and intrinsic brightness absolute—astronomers began using it as a technique for estimating true astronomical distances. This continues today, probing ever deeper into the universe as larger and larger telescopes find Cepheid variable stars in increasingly remote galaxies. Without Cepheids, the history of astronomy would be very different, and legendary names like “Hubble” might be far less well known today. 54 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Small Magellanic Cloud is an irregularly-shaped galactic neighbor of our Milky Way galaxy. Careful study over time of hundreds of individual stars in this system led Henrietta Leavitt to discover some whose variability could be related mathematically to their brightness. (Photo credit: F. Winkler/Middlebury College, the MCELS Team, and NOAO/AURA/NSF.) Henrietta Leavitt (Photo credit: Harvard College Observatory.) Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble measured the distances to 10 nearby Cepheid variable stars. Using the distances, astronomers could correct the apparent brightness of these stars to the values that would be observed if they all were located at the standard distance of 10 parsecs (blue dots). The best fit to the corrected data is the new calibration of the Cepheid standard candle, the best mathematical estimate of the relationship between period and intrinsic brightness (upper blue line). 5000 2000 1000 500 200 100 Using the infrared camera on Hubble, astronomers measured the apparent brightness and periods of 13 Cepheids in the Large Magellanic Cloud (red dots) and obtained a best fit to the data (red line). In this case, the Cepheids are all at about the same, large distance from the observer. When the Cepheid calibration curve is displaced downward by a reduction in brightness by a factor of 24.4 million, it almost exactly coincides with the data from the Large Magellanic Cloud. Therefore, the Cloud is the square root of that factor, or 4,940 times farther away than the standard distance of 10 parsecs, or 49,400 parsecs distant. 50 20 10 5 Apparent Brightness 2 1 0.5 0.2 0.1 0.05 0.02 x 1 The Fine Guidance Sensors on Hubble are the most accurate (4940)2 instruments available to astronomers for measuring the an- 0.01 nual parallax of stars, induced by the yearly motion of Earth 0.005 0.002 around the Sun. Hubble has three of these powerful instru- 0.001 ments. Two are needed to stabilize the pointing of the tele- 0.0005 scope during regular operations, but the third is available to 0.0002 astronomers. With this instrument, observers can measure 0.0001 0.00005 the positions of stars in its wide field of view with an accu- 0.00002 racy exceeding 0.001 arc second, or the size of a dime seen 0.00001 from a distance of about 2,000 miles. 0.000005 0.000002 Before Hubble, very few nearby Cepheids had been assigned 0.000001 good distances. Now, Hubble has triangulated the distances to 10 nearby Cepheids with an accuracy better than 10%. Period in Days 56 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Combined with another recent Hubble result—a small correction of the intrinsic brightness for a Cepheid’s chemical composition—these new distance measurements have significantly improved the calibration of Cepheids as standard candles. The new Cepheid calibration was checked on two galaxies with distances well known by other means, because of special circumstances. The first test was the Large Magellanic Cloud. (The Large and Small Magellanic Clouds are dwarf galaxies orbiting the Milky Way.) The second was the galaxy NGC 4258, at 100 times greater distance. In both cases, the two independent distance estimates agreed to 2–3%. Today, after a century of key contributions to science, Henrietta Leavitt’s Cepheid variable stars remain on the forefront of astronomical research. They are the main link between the bedrock—measuring distances by geometric triangulation—and other techniques for estimating cosmological distances to investigate the extent and structure of the universe itself. Indeed, a key reason for building the Hubble Space Telescope originally was to measure Cepheid variable stars in galaxies at distances of tens of millions of parsecs, which it achieved with outstanding success—laying the groundwork for today’s understanding of the age of the universe and the mysterious dark energy. There can be no remaining doubt that Cepheids in distant galaxies can be used with confidence to yield precise distances. Fritz Benedict is a member of the Hubble Astrometry Science Team. His scientific interests have centered on high precision parallaxes and the astrometric detection of low-mass companions to stars. He looks forward to working with data from the Space Interferometry Mission, looking for the astrometric signatures of Earth-sized planets around nearby stars. Fritz sails a Catalina 22 on Lake Travis outside Austin, Texas, walks his dog, reads science fiction, and maintains a home with Ann, his wife of 39 years. 57 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Great Nebula in Orion Massimo Robberto The Orion Nebula is an opalescent gem in the northern winter sky—an irregular, pale-green swatch encrusted with blue stars shining like diamonds. It is one of the nearest and most observable regions of star formation. Recently, Hubble obtained a new portrait of this beautiful object. The largest mosaic Hubble image to date, it is truly a work of art, as well as science. Astronomers are studying this image to better understand the formation of stars and planetary systems like the Solar System. Of particular interest are the few very massive stars—blue, hot, and short-lived—that dominate the scene in Orion, shaping the environment and disrupting planet-forming disks around the cooler, longer-lived, and lower-mass, yellow and red stars like the Sun. The Orion Nebula is a special opportunity to observe the general context in which the Solar System formed. Astronomers have a standard theory that describes how a star like the Sun and its associated planets form. The process starts when a high-density region within a large interstellar cloud of molecular gas collapses under the weight of its own gravity. At the center of the collapsing region, material accumulates and grows into a young star. Around it, a disk of orbiting gas and dust forms, capturing material from the surrounding cloud, and feeding it toward the center. Meanwhile, planets are thought to form by the accretion of material swept up in the disk. Larger planetary bodies develop sufficient gravity to capture gas for atmospheres; smaller ones just form as rocky spheres. Over time, the mother cloud of gas and dust dissipates. Some of the material is incorporated into the central star and forming planets. The remaining fraction is pushed away from the system by the outward pressure of light and by a wind of atoms ejected from the surface of stars. This clearing wind comes from the central star and possibly other stars nearby, which may later move away. A variety of observational evidence supports this standard theory, including protostars deeply embedded in molecular clouds, disks around most or all stars at some period in their youth, and the co-planar alignment of the planetary orbits in the Solar System, which astronomers believe is a fossil of the original disk. The Orion Nebula is “only” about 1,600 light-years away (9,300 trillion miles!) At that distance, Hubble can resolve features as small as the radius of Uranus’s orbit or about one five-hundredth of the typical distance between stars in the Nebula. 59 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Astronomers have little information about the wider context in which the young Solar System developed. Nevertheless, under the reasonable assumption that the Orion Nebula is a typical star-forming region, it presents astronomers with a valuable laboratory for observing star and planetary system formation in a controlled—or at least understandable—setting. The exact correspondences to the situation of the early Solar System may be uncertain, but the phenomena in Orion are clearly relevant, and therefore, ultimately instructive. The hot, blue stars in Orion are among the youngest and most massive stars in our galactic neighborhood. Such stars live only a few tens of millions of years. By contrast, stars with the mass of the Sun or less have stable lifetimes ranging upwards of 10 billion years. The hot, blue stars release huge amounts of energy as ultraviolet light and in strong stellar winds—on scales far greater than for young low-mass stars. The effect of hot, blue stars is devastating on the whole molecular cloud, not just locally around the star. Their intense ultraviolet light dissociates molecules into atoms and ions, and accelerates them to high speeds, creating powerful winds. As the temperature and pressure in the ionized gas increases, a hot bubble forms inside the cloud. The bubble grows, and when it reaches the nearest edge of the molecular cloud, the gas flows rapidly away, like champagne from an opened bottle. The Orion Nebula is just such a great cavity in a cold molecular cloud—scoured out, cut open, and exposed to our view. The Orion Nebula is about 15 light-years wide—about four times the distance from the Sun to the nearest star. Within the open cavity, we can count thousands of stars, all formed within about the last million years. These stars include the whole gamut of stellar masses, ranging from many cool, red stars, of typically tenths of a solar mass, to fewer warmer, yellow stars like the Sun, to a very few hot, blue stars, typically of tens of solar masses. We see myriad low-mass stars at various stages of early evolution—some still enshrouded in thinning dust, some with disks, some with jets, and some seemingly free and clear—all situated in the environment created by the hot, blue stars. The goal of the new portrait of Orion is to identify, classify, and characterize the objects, investigate new phenomena, and ultimately draw lessons relevant to the Solar System. To create the new portrait of the Orion Nebula, we obtained a mosaic of 2,000 exposures, using all Hubble’s imaging instruments and nine color filters, which cover wavelengths from the near ultraviolet to the near infrared. We combined images 60 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Brown dwarfs in Orion. The faint red sources in this close-up image of the Orion Nebula are brown dwarfs or “failed” stars. 61 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review from the Advanced Camera for Surveys into a single image with 33,000 by 36,000 picture elements. These exposures are the deepest look ever taken into the Orion Nebula—or any star-forming region; they pierce through the veil of nebular light to reveal galaxies in the distant background. Hubble’s high resolution enables us to separate the light of the closely packed stars in Orion. Its high stability and lightmeasuring accuracy overcome the challenge of the non-uniform brightness of nebula. In the Hubble images, we can precisely compare the stellar signals through many filters. We can use these accurate comparisons to measure the stellar temperature and luminosity. From these measurements, we can determine the radius, mass, age, and even the mass accretion rate of each star. This catalog of stellar properties will be the largest uniform survey of young stars ever achieved. The Hubble images reveal dozens of candidates for brown dwarf, or “failed,” stars—including isolated singles, companions of more massive “real” stars, and even some binary brown dwarfs. Brown dwarfs are stars with a mass less than 8% of the solar mass. The temperature at the centers of these objects is not sufficient to start the nuclear reactions that cause larger stars to shine. At a young age, they may burn deuterium—a heavy isotope of hydrogen—but this phase is short-lived, and after it is over, brown dwarfs radiate only the energy released from their slow gravitational contraction. Old brown dwarfs cool and fade from view, and unseen brown dwarfs represent an unknown fraction of the mass of the universe. In Orion, we can estimate the fraction of brown dwarfs in the general star-formation process, which can be used to constrain their total mass in the universe. We also see many circumstellar disks in Orion, and we presume that planets may be growing in some or all of them. Some disks have developed cometary features due to heating by ultraviolet light and stellar winds. Clearly, these disks are being disrupted and dissipated—and perhaps interrupted in the process of building planets. If Earth formed in an environment like Orion, its early days were not an easy ride. The final products of the Orion portrait project will be catalogs of the brightness and location of stars, an atlas of diffuse objects, and multi-epoch images of the region in nine filters. With these data, astronomers can address fundamental questions about the Orion Nebula, such as whether all stars formed at the same time or in different episodes, whether the massive 62 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Images through various filters (denoted by false colors) reveal aspects of three circumstellar structures in Orion. The stars are generally brighter in redder filters because of dust, which absorbs bluer light more strongly than redder light. A star at the center of each image appears to be surrounded by a circumstellar disk, evidenced by dark silhouettes in the non-red filters. The hydrogen/nitrogen filters show arcs of emission from those elements, excited by the intense ultraviolet light from the massive stars in the Nebula. In the bottom row, the hydrogen/nitrogen filter reveals a jet protruding from the central star, perpendicular to disk plane, which is seen edge-on. 63 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Orion Nebula through History The four “Trapezium” stars, seen at the center of this image, are the four brightest and most massive stars in the Orion Nebula. Before the invention of the telescope, the Orion Nebula was never recognized as an extended object. Makers of star charts from Ptolemy in the second century, to Johann Bayer in 1603, recorded it as a single fifth-magnitude star. As a celestial object, the Orion Nebula is huge—larger than the full Moon—with many faint stars and rich nebulosity. Interestingly, Galileo missed the nebulosity when he observed the Trapezium region using the first astronomical telescope in 1610. He left it to a French lawyer, Nicholas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc, to announce the discovery of the nebulosity the next year. Charles Messier added Orion to his famous catalog of nebulae in 1769, as M42 and M43, thinking the two major features were unrelated objects. The first to articulate the scientific significance of the Orion Nebula was Sir William Herschel (1738–1822), who presciently called it “an unformed fiery mist, the chaotic material of future suns.” Today, astronomers study the Orion Nebula to better understand the processes that formed the Sun and planets in the Solar System. 64 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review stars are latest to appear, and the reason they are clustered at the center. We can also learn the initial distribution of stellar masses—a fundamental astrophysical principle—including the fraction of brown dwarfs. In these ways, the Orion project will be a long-lasting contribution by Hubble to our understanding of how stars and planets form, providing insights to the origin of the Solar System, Earth, and the life it bears. Massimo Robberto received his Ph.D. in Astronomy at the University of Turin in Italy. He worked for 10 years at the Turin Observatory, before moving to the Max Planck Institute für Astronomie in Heidelberg, and then to the Space Telescope Science Institute. His technical interest is infrared astronomical cameras. His main scientific interest is star formation, particularly in the Orion Nebula. Massimo leads the Hubble Treasury program on the Orion Nebula. His free time is devoted to his wife Giuliana, four-year-old daughter Gloria, and their friends. His hobbies include playing the baroque flute and piano, climbing, playing chess on the Internet, studying harmony and counterpoint, and of course, stargazing. 65 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Transiting “Hot Jupiters” near the Galactic Center Kailash C. Sahu Hubble has found 16 new planetary candidates orbiting a variety of stars near the center of our Milky Way galaxy. These discoveries are helpful in understanding the surprising phenomenon of “hot Jupiters” in a wider context. In the mid-1990s, Swiss astronomers Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz regularly observed the Sun-like star 51 Pegasi for months, measuring its speed along the line of sight. They found the speed varied periodically by about 130 miles per hour, repeating every 4.2 days. After ruling out other possible explanations, they concluded this “wobbling” was due to an unseen planetary companion, whose gravity was tugging on 51 Pegasi as it orbited the star. The inferred mass was like Jupiter’s, but the orbital distance was only one twentieth the distance between the Earth and Sun! Being so close to the star, this planet is expected to be hot, and according to conventional wisdom, such a hot Jupiter should not exist. No theory of star and planet formation envisions enough material to build a Jupiter-size planet so close to a young star—yet here one exists. It must have migrated inwards after forming farther out. In the decade since the planet around 51 Pegasi was discovered, astronomers have been actively searching for more. More than 200 extrasolar planets—10% are hot Jupiters—have been detected now, mostly through this gravitational wobble in the star’s motion. The wobble technique is not practical at larger distances, however, because of the increasing faintness of the stars. For this reason, no planet detected by wobble is located farther than 500 light-years from the Sun—less than 1% of the distance across our galaxy. “Transits” offer a technique to search for planets around more distant stars. In rare cases, when a planet’s orbital plane is aligned with the line of sight, the planet will pass in front of its star once per orbit, blocking some of its light. Astronomers A notable recent example of a planet transiting the face of a star was the passage of Venus across the disk of the Sun on June 8, 2004. This image shows the planet as it nears completion of its passage. Recording the tiny drop in light that results from a planet partially blocking its star is how Hubble can detect Jupiter-sized planets. (Image and processing: David Cortner) 67 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review A color composite of a small region of the Sagittarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search (SWEEPS) field, which includes four candidates for stars with planetary companions (circled). Radial velocity measurements support the existence of a planetary companion in the case of SWEEPS–04 (bottom right). Superimposed is an artist’s conception of a hot Jupiter, which shows tidal distortion of the planet and channeling of the stellar wind along magnetic field lines. 68 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review can identify transiting planets by searching for this tiny dip in the apparent brightness of the star. With this technique, astronomers using ground-based telescopes have found a handful of planets around stars as far away as 6,000 light-years from the Sun; more are expected from the many transit surveys now underway at observatories around the world. Because of its unique capabilities, a transit campaign with Hubble is exceptionally powerful. Operating above the atmosphere, free from most of the effects that make stars appear to flicker in brightness, Hubble can search farther and fainter stars for planetary transits, detecting smaller changes in brightness than is possible from the ground. Furthermore, the ground-based transit experiments suffer from false positives—artifacts masquerading as planetary transits—because of the inability to completely separate the light of adjacent stars in crowded fields. Only Hubble can search for transits in crowded fields—like the bulge at the center of our galaxy—which are the most desirable targets because of the increased efficiency of searching many stars at once. For such fields, the high spatial resolution of Hubble is crucial for minimizing false positives. The Sagittarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search (SWEEPS) program searched a dense star field close to the galactic center, looking for transits by orbiting planets with periods less than about four days. The SWEEPS field contains about 300,000 stars, about 60% of which are bright enough for Hubble to detect transits by planets the size of Jupiter. (These stars are up to 5,000 times fainter than those that have been searched for transits from the ground.) Hubble took 530 pictures of the star field, collecting over 100 gigabytes of data—the most data Hubble has ever obtained in a single week. The observing team developed special software to measure the brightness variations of all the stars in the SWEEPS images, being careful to correct all known instrumental effects, such as small variations in the focus of the telescope. To eliminate false positives, the definite signature of a transit was sought: the light from the star must dip down slightly for a few minutes or hours, with the same variation in two wavelength bands, and then recover at the same rate as the initial dip. A few hours or days later, the same signature must repeat. Furthermore, these dips must be unique to one star and not occur at the same time in any neighboring star, which would indicate cross-contamination of light. Next Page: One-half of the SWEEPS field observed with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. Sixteen of the 180,000 stars in the SWEEPS field showed small dips in brightness during the week of observations. The dips suggest that a planet about the size of Jupiter passed between us and the star. 69 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Analyzing the data with this software, astronomers found 16 cases where dips in brightness are probably due to planetary transits. The candidate planets are typically the size of Jupiter and have orbital periods ranging from 10 hours to 4 days. A large fraction of the host stars have low mass, the lowest being 45% that of the Sun. Previously, astronomers did not know if stars of such low mass were capable of forming planetary systems; Hubble has now proved they can. The planet candidates preferentially revolve 3FE'JMUFS around stars abundant in elements heavier than :FMMPX'JMUFS .PEFM hydrogen and helium, which confirms a previous finding from stars found with planets in the solar neighborhood: heavy-element abundance favors planetary formation. Because of the faintness and crowding of the targets, most of the SWEEPS candidates cannot be confirmed by the wobble technique. Never- Observed light curve of SWEEPS–11 with clear evidence of a transiting planet with a radius of 30% larger than Jupiter. The top panel shows the full data set plotted against the fraction of the derived orbital period. The bottom panel shows an expanded view around the transit itself, along with the theoretical prediction (in light blue) for the shape of a dip that would be caused by a planetary object. The fit is excellent, and confidence in the interpretation is high. Radial velocity observations, obtained with the 8 m Very Large Telescope of the European Southern Observatory in Chile, supports the planetary nature of SWEEPS–11. 71 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review theless, the wobble technique was successfully applied to two of the brightest candidates, which further confirmed the planetary nature of these candidates. This strongly supports the estimate that at least 45% of the SWEEPS candidates are genuine planets. A few of the planets orbit so fast that their year—the time for one complete revolution around the star—is less than 24 hours. These ultra-short period planets occur only around stars less massive than the Sun. One possible explanation is that any planet orbiting so close to more massive stars—which are much hotter and brighter—would get so hot that it would evaporate. If so, a future search around younger stars should find hot Jupiters before they evaporate. Hubble has contributed important new information on extrasolar planets. It has confirmed that conditions for planet formation are more favorable around stars with a greater abundance of heavy elements, and that planets not only form and survive around all classes of stars, but their occurrence rate is similar all across the galaxy. Kailash Sahu is an Associate Astronomer at the Space Telescope Science Institute. He is an instrument scientist for the Advanced Camera for Surveys. His research interests include the search for extrasolar planets through transits and microlensing, the nature of dark matter, and gamma-ray bursts. He is a founding member of the Probing Lensing Anomalies NETwork (PLANET) collaboration, which searches for planets using gravitational microlensing, and he is the Principal Investigator of the SWEEPS project which uses Hubble to detect planets passing in front of stars in the galactic bulge. The constellation of Sagittarius provides a virtual treasure chest of stars to search for possible planets. This Hubble image is of a different but similar section of sky to the Sagittarius Window Eclipsing Extrasolar Planet Search (SWEEPS) field described in this article. 72 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Einstein Rings: Nature’s Gravitational Lenses Leonidas Moustakas and Adam Bolton In his General Theory of Relativity, published in 1915, Albert Einstein proposed that gravity bends the path of light. In 1936, at the urging of an amateur scientist, he wrote a brief paper about an optical illusion due to this bending: multiple images of one astronomical source located behind another. With near-perfect alignment, a full “Einstein ring” should appear around the intermediate, lensing object. “Of course, there is no hope of observing this phenomenon directly,” Einstein wrote. In his cover letter, he thanked the editor of Science for his “cooperation with the little publication, which Mister Mandl squeezed out of me. It is of little value, but it makes the poor guy happy.” Today, the elegant phenomenon of “strong” gravitational lensing—the case when multiple images can occur—makes many astronomers happy. Even though such gravitational lenses are uncommon, many have been found and studied, with Hubble playing an important role. Furthermore, lenses are proving to be much more than curiosities. When the lens and source are galaxies, the illusion can teach us about nonluminous and hence unseen “dark matter,” hidden structure, and the processes by which galaxies form and evolve. The angular size of the Einstein ring is determined by the amount of mass—both stars and dark matter—enclosed within it. By virtue of their stronger gravity, more massive foreground galaxies produce larger Einstein-ring images of galaxies in the background. Measuring the mass of galaxies is a difficult, but fundamental, task of astronomy. Lensing, when it occurs, is perhaps the most direct method. Though gravitational lensing has been studied previously by Hubble and ground-based telescopes, this phenomenon has never been seen before in such detail. The Advanced Camera for Surveys image of Abell 1689 reveals 10 times as many arcs as would be seen by a groundbased telescope. It is five times more sensitive and provides pictures that are twice as sharp as the previous Hubble cameras; it can see the very faintest arcs with greater clarity. 75 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Optical Illusion of Gravitational Lensing The more-distant galaxy is the “source,” and the intermediate galaxy is the “lens.” If the source, lens, and observer are closely aligned, the gravity of the lens will bend some light rays from the source onto new paths towards the observer. To the observer, these bent rays appear as if they originate at points on the sky displaced from the location of lens. Indeed, rays from multiple paths around the lens and at different clock angles may arrive at the observer, creating multiple images of the source. In the case of a near-perfect alignment, it is possible for light rays to be bent towards the observer all around the lens, creating the appearance of a full Einstein ring, as shown! An Einstein ring does not unambiguously tell how mass is arranged within the lensing galaxy. Nevertheless, the arrangement of mass is important for understanding the physical structure of the galaxy and its evolutionary history. We can solve this problem by measuring the distribution, or “spread,” of stellar velocities within the lensing galaxy: the faster the stars move, the more the mass must be concentrated towards the center of the galaxy, for gravity to balance centrifugal force. 76 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Until recently, both diagnostic tools for studying galactic mass—lensing and velocity spread—were available only for a few objects. Out of the fewer than 100 gravitational lenses known, only a small number were sufficiently near, or luminous enough, to allow accurate measurements of their velocity spreads. To surmount this difficulty, astronomers are now combining two outstanding astronomical resources—the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and the Hubble Space Telescope—to find large numbers of new, bright, gravitational lenses, which they can study with great precision from both space- and ground-based observatories. Begun in 1998, the Sloan survey has imaged roughly one fourth of the sky and measured the brightness and colors of millions of stars, galaxies, and quasars. Using spectroscopy, Sloan has also measured the distances to nearly a million galaxies. (The distances are calculated from the redshifts of the galaxy spectra due to the cosmological expansion of the universe. See the sidebar on quasi-stellar object spectra in Arav’s article on active galactic nuclei [AGN] outflow.) Any two objects that are found close together on the sky, but are located at vastly different distances, are prime candidates for gravitational lensing. By sifting through all the Sloan spectra of large, luminous galaxies, astronomers have discovered hundreds of new, bright candidates, which are usually massive elliptical galaxies in front of more distant, faint, star-forming galaxies. Lens Lensed Source Flux Observation Wavelength Sloan spectroscopy is key to finding gravitational lenses consisting of two galaxies lined up by coincidence. A difference in distance is indicated by a difference in cosmological redshift, that is, characteristic spectral features appearing at different, redshifted wavelengths. The left panel shows a typical spectrum that the Sloan spectroscopy might observe for a lens candidate (green). This candidate “lensing” galaxy is a giant elliptical galaxy, which exhibits the composite spectrum of myriad typical stars—a spectrum that is well understood and can be easily modeled (middle panel, yellow). When the model spectrum is redshifted to match the absorption lines in the observed spectrum, and then subtracted from the observed spectrum, the spectrum of the distance source or “lensed” galaxy is revealed (blue). It shows “anomalous” emission lines at higher redshift than that of the lensing galaxy. 77 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Sloan-Hubble program has been extremely efficient in finding new Einstein rings. Two of these are shown here (top row). To make the study of the rings themselves easier, astronomers create simple models of the lens galaxies and “subtract” them out of the Hubble images. The results for these two lenses are shown in the bottom row. 78 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Finding the true gravitational lenses among the Sloan candidates demands the unrivaled sensitivity and image sharpness of Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). By the summer of 2006, images have confirmed more than 40 new gravitational lenses. Astronomers are studying the mass distribution in these lenses to better understand how galaxies form and evolve. Galaxy formation and evolution is a messy business, involving the gravitational force of both normal and dark matter, as well as the myriad processes of normal matter—like star formation, radiation, cooling, turbulence, winds, and chemical enrichment. Adding to the complexity are collisions and mergers between galaxies, and the outflows and jets of supermassive black holes in AGN (which are the subjects of three other articles in this book). No models or simulations can yet take all these detailed processes into account. Nevertheless, a sufficient theoretical framework is available to make qualitative comparisons with the mass-related results of strong lensing. From Hubble images and Sloan spectra of strong lenses, astronomers gain three types of new information. First, the sizes of the Einstein rings provide the total masses of the lensing galaxies. Second, the images reveal the shapes of the lensing galaxies, which are useful for guiding the modeling of mass structure. Third, the Sloan spectra provide initial estimates of the velocity spreads. From this information, astronomers have reached a remarkable conclusion: The mass in the centers of elliptical galaxies has a simple, apparently universal structure, one that has remained the same over most of the age of the universe. Despite the varied, chaotic origins of these galaxies, their luminous and dark matter somehow interact to achieve a single end-state of mass structure. Furthermore, this end-state is very different from the structure predicted for the case of pure dark matter, which confirms the dominant role of the processes of normal matter in galaxy evolution. The Sloan-Hubble research program on gravitational lenses will discover more lenses and investigate this growing sample in greater detail. We expect to make a direct determination of how the ratio of total mass to luminosity in elliptical galaxies depends upon galaxy mass. The mass-to-light ratio is connected to the fraction of dark matter in the central region of a galaxy, and holds clues about how and when galaxies formed—clues that we are still deciphering. A dependence of the ratio on galaxy mass has been seen in other types of observations, and it will be determined most accurately by gravitational lensing. 79 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review In the future, we expect that spectra from large ground-based telescopes will provide improved measurements of the velocity distributions in individual lensing galaxies, which will improve the accuracy of the measured mass distributions. This will lead to a better understanding of the relationships between the mass distribution and other properties of galaxies, such as the luminosity and the history of star formation. Sometimes an illusion is much more than it appears, as with Einstein’s rings. Leonidas Moustakas is a Scientist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which is operated by the California Institute of Technology. He has been involved in many searches for gravitational lenses—from the Hubble Deep Field to the Hubble-Sloan program—and is currently searching for gravitational lenses in all the Hubble data ever taken. He is especially excited about researching the evolution of the structure in the central regions of galaxies, which is only possible with gravitational lenses. Adam Bolton is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He devotes most of his time to the study of galaxy structure and evolution using strong gravitational lensing. The Hubble-Sloan project originally grew out of the research for his Ph.D. thesis at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His work in observational astrophysics combines dual interests in basic physics and amateur astronomy. The Hubble images seen here represent a significant improvement over the view through his 8-inch backyard telescope. The Sloan Lens ACS collaboration also includes Scott Burles, Leon Koopmans, and Tommaso Treu. 80 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Two more examples of new lenses, as in the previous figure. The lens on the right is truly a “cosmic bullseye,” where the more-distant source galaxy is just about perfectly aligned with the massive lens galaxy and our view of it from Earth. It is a textbook case of an Einstein ring. 81 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review A New Population of Active Galactic Nuclei Amy J. Barger Astronomers are pathfinders who explore the universe as Lewis and Clark explored the West—to discover what is there, learn how it relates, and reveal the forces at work. Just as the pioneers charted the land and engaged the people to construct a narrative about the new frontier, astronomers map the breadth and depth of the cosmos, counting and characterizing the objects to determine the main elements and basic processes for the true story of the sky. In recent years, “active galactic nuclei,” or AGN, have become a central theme in the cosmic story. From several lines of research, astronomers have learned that AGN are major agents of change in galaxies, which are the building blocks of the universe. Three other articles in this book discuss topics related to AGN and their roles in galaxy evolution: jets (Perlman) and outflows (Arav), and “red-anddead” galaxies (Davis & Faber). This article discusses a newly discovered population of AGN in relatively nearby galaxies. AGN are luminous objects at the centers of galaxies. They emit staggering amounts of energy across the whole spectrum of light—at radio, infrared, visible, ultraviolet, and x-ray wavelengths. The most luminous AGN are “quasi-stellar objects,” or QSOs, which far outshine all the hundreds of billions of stars in their host galaxies. The only source of energy capable of fueling AGN is the gravitational energy released by material falling towards a small, unseen object with a mass that is millions to billions of times the mass of the Sun. AGN are observed to fluctuate in brightness on timescales of days, or even hours. From this timescale and the speed of light, astronomers can infer that the object is indeed very small, being comparable in size to the planetary orbits around the Sun. The luminous material itself—ionized gas—moves at very high velocities, from which astronomers infer that the gas revolves around an extremely heavy, but unseen object: a supermassive black hole. NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA) jointly released this image of the magnificent galaxy Messier 82 (M82). M82 is a prototypical active galaxy, with strong multiwavelength emissions from its center. This mosaic image combines the light of x-rays from the Chandra Space Observatory, infrared light from Spitzer, and optical wavelengths from Hubble. The galaxy is remarkable for its bright blue disk, webs of shredded clouds, and fiery-looking plumes of glowing hydrogen blasting out of its central regions. 83 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Black holes are so dense that nothing, not even light, can escape their gravitational pull. Stellar-mass black holes are known to form from the collapse of massive stars at the end of their lives, but how supermassive black holes form—with their masses of several million to several billion times the mass of the Sun—is still an enigma. Hubble observations of the orbital motion of stars and gas around the nuclei of local galaxies reveal that supermassive black holes reside at the centers of nearly all galaxies, including our own Milky Way. The supermassive black holes at the centers of local galaxies, which must have been created during an earlier phase of active accretion, are now dormant, having run out of fuel to consume. By taking a census of accreting supermassive black holes in the universe’s past, astronomers hope to piece together how local supermassive black holes came to be. The luminous portion of the AGN is an accretion disk around the black hole, which captures material from afar. The material in the disk loses energy, probably via interaction with magnetic fields. The material spirals into the event horizon of the black hole—the surface from which neither light nor matter can emerge—and disappears. The gravitational energy released in this journey heats the accretion disk, producing the light of the AGN and driving the jets and outflows. In turn, the jets and outflows are feedback mechanisms that govern the AGN: they blast interstellar gas out of the galaxy, ultimately starving the accretion disk of new material and shutting down the AGN. Distant supermassive black holes can only be identified while they are accreting. The first phase of the census involved obtaining optical spectra of those distant sources whose appearances in optical images suggest that they may contain AGN. Spectroscopy is a powerful technique that splits light into colors, just as a prism splits sunlight into the colors of a rainbow. A spectrum is a record of the amount of light measured at every color, or wavelength, which can show emission or absorption features that astronomers can use to identify sources as AGN and to measure their distances. The general expansion of the universe stretches the light waves emitted from distant sources during their journey to us. This stretching causes the light waves to become longer, and hence, to appear redder. This stretching is referred to as the “cosmological redshift,” and once we assume a cosmological model, it tells us the distance to an object and its age. (See the sidebar on QSO spectra in Arav’s article on AGN outflow.) 84 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Chandra x-ray and ground-based optical images of the Hubble Deep Field–North region. The Hubble Deep Field–North was originally a 10-day exposure by Hubble of a tiny region of sky located in the Big Dipper. The field has since been intensively observed at a number of different wavelengths using many different telescopes. These new images cover a much wider area than the original Hubble images. The left image is a composite of three x-ray energy ranges. Most of the sources in the x-ray image are active galactic nuclei powered by accretion onto supermassive black holes. The right image is a composite of three different optical images observed with the 8.2-m Subaru telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii. There are many more sources visible in the optical image, because star-forming galaxies are far more common in the universe than active galactic nuclei. The first phase of the AGN census, at optical wavelengths, found that the universe went through a “QSO era” a few billion years after the Big Bang, when QSOs (the most luminous AGN) were much more common than they are today. After that era, the number densities of such extremely luminous, accreting, supermassive black holes dropped off dramatically. Thus, from the optical data gathered, it seemed that most of the action took place at early times, after which the universe settled into a sedate middle age. 85 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review But wait! Optical observations cannot detect AGN that are hidden by gas and dust; therefore, the optical census provided only a partial glimpse of the demographics of these sources and their roles in galaxy evolution. Fortunately, there are ways to detect hidden black holes, the best of which is by observing the high-energy x-rays that originate at the closest detectable distances to the supermassive black holes, within a few multiples of the radius of the event horizon. X-ray astronomy can only be performed from space, because Earth’s atmosphere blocks x-rays from reaching its surface. In 1962, an x-ray telescope built by a team led by Riccardo Giacconi revealed a uniform x-ray glow coming from the sky. (Giacconi, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2002, was the first director of the Space Telescope Science Institute.) Subsequent satellite observatories confirmed and extended the measurements of this glow to higher energies, but the individual galaxies that we now know produce it remained unknown for decades. A major reason for this was the same effect that reduced the count of optically identified AGN: the cocooning of many supermassive black holes by gas and dust. Light emitted in the AGN accretion process at wavelengths between infrared and low-energy x-rays are absorbed by the surrounding gas and dust, making the sources too difficult to identify at those wavelengths. Chandra x-ray image with two optical counterparts from Hubble imaging. The image to the left again shows the deep Chandra image of the Hubble Deep Field–North region. The optical counterparts to two of the x-ray sources identified in the Hubble Advanced Camera for Surveys images of this field are shown in the images to the right. The top right image shows a blue, quasi-stellar object, where the emission from the accretion onto the supermassive black hole at the host galaxy’s center outshines the host galaxy’s light. The bottom right image shows a beautiful spiral galaxy with an active nucleus obscured by dust and gas. If it were unobscured, the nucleus would probably be at least 10 times brighter, swamping the light from the rest of the galaxy. This source would not have been identified as an active galactic nucleus without the x-ray imaging data. 86 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The Chandra X-ray Observatory, launched by NASA in 1999, revolutionized studies of supermassive black holes. Not only does Chandra’s great sensitivity detect high-energy x-rays, it also accurately pinpoints their locations, which enables astronomers to follow up with other telescopes to learn more about the nature of the x-ray sources. For example, even if a central black hole is obscured at optical wavelengths, once the x-ray observations show which galaxy contains it, optical spectroscopy can be used to determine the distance to that host galaxy. Then, Hubble’s high-resolution imaging can be used to determine whether the host galaxy is currently undergoing—or has recently undergone—a merging event with another galaxy, which could provide new fuel for the galaxy’s AGN. The deepest x-ray survey to date is the 2-million-second-long Chandra observation of the region of the Hubble Deep Field–North. In a side-by-side comparison of the Hubble optical image with the Chandra x-ray image, one sees that there are many more sources in the Hubble image. This is because most galaxies are dominated by star formation, and emission from star formation peaks at optical wavelengths. Therefore, Hubble can easily detect star-forming galaxies. In contrast, the x-ray emission from star formation is weak, because it is a much less energetic process than black-hole accretion, and even this deepest of Chandra images only begins to detect star-forming galaxies. Thus, the x-ray image is dominated by luminous, accreting, supermassive black holes, and there are far fewer of these than there are star-forming galaxies. When astronomers looked at the optical counterparts to the Chandra x-ray sources, they found great diversity, ranging from optically identifiable QSOs, to bright host galaxies with no emission-line AGN signature in their optical spectra, to extremely faint sources for which it was difficult to obtain a redshift from optical spectroscopy. For these latter sources, astronomers used Hubble optical and ground-based near-infrared images at various wavelengths to infer the redshifts. In fact, astronomers were able to re-find all of the optically identified QSOs in the Hubble Deep Field–North using the x-ray data, which provided a good check on the techniques. The truly exciting discovery was that the known QSOs were not the only accreting supermassive black holes in the field. Astronomers discovered a new population of AGN that were not discovered by optical observations alone, and, much to their surprise, these newly discovered AGN did not just form in the QSO era! 87 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review In fact, these AGN reside in relatively nearby galaxies. Although their behavior is not the same as the distant QSOs—QSOs are voracious consumers, while these new sources are much more moderate—there are so many that together they account for a substantial fraction of the total energy released by AGN over the history of the universe. Black-hole accretion was not just a phenomenon of the distant past; the middle-aged universe was just good at hiding the fact that it was still an active and exciting place! Thanks to the complementary powers of the Great Observatories, we are completing the census and demography of AGN, which are the leading agents of galactic evolution. Two hundred years after Lewis and Clark, their spirit is alive and their methods are at work on the cosmic frontier. Amy J. Barger is an Associate Professor of Astronomy at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. She also holds an affiliate graduate faculty appointment at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. She is an observational cosmologist who studies the star formation and accretion histories of the universe. Born in Madison, Wisconsin, she earned her B.A. at the University of Wisconsin–Madison and her Ph.D. from King’s College, University of Cambridge as a Marshall Scholar. The rich field of galaxies seen here in a section of the image known as the Hubble Deep Field–North has also been targeted by the other NASA great observatories, Chandra and Spitzer. Such coordinated observations enable scientists to study the relative amounts of electromagnetic radiation emitted by these distant sources and identify active galactic nuclei. 88 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Galaxies over the Latter Half of Cosmic Time Marc Davis and Sandra M. Faber Galaxies are the basic systems of the universe. Like diamonds strewn across the sky, their tiny points of light mark the cosmic landscape. They reveal its organization into superclusters of thousands of galaxies, which border the vast voids of empty space. Galaxies make the universe interesting. Without them, the expansion of the universe would have diluted the cosmic soup into a thin broth of sterile and boringly diffuse gas. Instead, the excess gravity of tiny seeds of matter from the Big Bang slowed down cosmic expansion in regions that would become galaxies. The seeds drew in nearby gas, which eventually spawned the first generation of stars. Over billions of years, supernova explosions enriched the mix with oxygen, carbon, iron, and other elements that form only inside stars. These heavy elements are necessary to make planets such as Earth. The local gas consumed by star formation was replenished by fresh gas falling in from outside. By these cycles of stellar birth and death, galaxies became fertile, self-sustaining ecosystems and evolved to become more and more suited for planets, and for life. “Red-and-dead” galaxies While we think this picture describes the evolution of most galaxies, for many it apparently does not. In some galaxies, something intervenes to quench star formation by shutting off the supply of gas. This results in “red-and-dead” galaxies, which lack the characteristic blue tinge of freshly formed young stars. Such galaxies have given birth to all the stars and planetary systems they ever will, and for them the window of opportunity to create fresh habitats for life has closed. The number of red-and-dead galaxies has increased dramatically over the latter half of cosmic time. What mysterious process is killing off star formation in the universe? This new NASA Hubble Space Telescope image of the Antennae galaxies is the sharpest yet of this merging pair of galaxies. During the course of the collision, billions of stars will be formed. The brightest and most compact of these star-birth regions are called super star clusters, visible here as clumps of blue/white stars. As this essay explains, galaxy collisions producing massive bursts of stars might possibly lead over time to the formation of “red-and-dead” galaxies. 91 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review A K B C L D M A E F The AEGIS picture contains one billion picture elements—the equivalent of 500 highdefinition TV screens. It includes images of over 25,000 galaxies maturing to adulthood over the last several billion years. H G Currently, there are two different ideas to explain the origin of red-and-dead galaxies. The first is that some galaxies may fall into massive clusters, where intergalactic gas at millions of degrees is too hot to be collected. Starved of their gas supply, such galaxies would cease to form stars. An alternative idea is that occasional collisions of galaxies may trigger massive bursts of star formation, producing supernovae that sweep away the gas. Such collisions may also drive gas clouds toward the center of a galaxy, feeding a supermassive black hole and producing such intense emission from the active J I galactic nucleus that radiation pressure prevents other gas from falling into the galaxy. 92 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review O D H I N L T` B J E C N F S M G P K O R Q Q Hubble is the perfect tool for testing such theories. Its images can tease out fine details in the P S R T structures of distant galaxies, showing which ones are forming stars normally, which are colliding, and which are red and dead. Active galactic nuclei (AGN)—the bright accretion disks feeding supermassive black holes—stand out as bright centers, which are visible to great distances and far back in time. In fact, each Hubble image is a “core drilling” through space-time, because successive strata disclose information from increasingly earlier epochs. Knowing the distance to a galaxy is the same as knowing its age when we see it, which allows us to reconstruct the galaxy populations of previous eras. 93 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The AEGIS survey A new survey project called All-Wavelength Extended Groth Strip International Survey (AEGIS) has created one of the largest Hubble pictures to date. The image is 1/6º wide by 1º long, stretching twice the width of the full Moon. It is a mosaic of 63 tiles, each exposed through green and red filters, to produce diagnostic color images of some 25,000 galaxies bright enough for detailed study. The AEGIS team is counting the red-and-dead (quenched) galaxies and searching for circumstances—like collisions, AGN, and other factors—that may affect star formation on a galactic scale. A special feature of AEGIS is a rich array of supporting data from other space- and ground-based observatories—nine besides Hubble. The Chandra x-ray satellite locates black holes buried in dust clouds and invisible to Hubble. Together, the Galaxy Evolution Explorer (ultraviolet) and Spitzer (infrared) satellites measure all new star formation, including any starbursts hidden by dust. The second phase of the Deep Extragalactic Evolutionary Probe (DEEP 2) redshift survey from the Keck Observatory provides optical spectra of thousands of galaxies, from which distances, galaxy masses, and chemical compositions can be determined. Each facility contributes key information to create a full portrait of every object. The AEGIS field, in the constellation Boötes, is one of the most intensively studied regions of the sky, with deep coverage at all wavelengths from radio waves to x-rays. Such panchromatic coverage provides individual portraits of over 25,000 galaxies, showing star formation and revealing factors that may affect it. 94 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Keck DEEP 2 spectroscopic redshift survey Palomar near-IR WIRC JK survey Canada France DEEP 2 imaging survey Chandra X-ray satellite Spizter IRAC VLA 6cm Hubble Hubble Hubble Hubble Hubble Spitzer/Multiband Imaging Photometer Spitzer Spitzer Spitzer Spitzer / MIPS / MIPS / MIPS / MIPS Spitzer/Infrared Array Camera Spitzer Spitzer Spitzer Spitzer / IRAC / IRAC / IRAC / IRAC Chandra Chandra Chandra Chandra Chandra The galaxy CXO–J141741.9 illustrates how telescopes at different wavelengths are needed to tell the whole story of an object. The spatial detail of the Hubble image is needed to identify the triggering collision. Spitzer images are needed to identify star formation heating the obscuring dust. Chandra x-rays are needed to identify the quasi-stellar object. The galaxy CXO–J141741.9 is an example of how multispectral data fit together. The color Hubble image shows a highly disturbed object with clumps of newly formed stars. The brightest clump coincides with a bright x-ray source discovered by Chandra. This source is a quasi-stellar object (QSO) fueled by the clouds of gas being swallowed by a massive black hole. Ground-based data at millimeter wavelengths show an exceptionally bright starburst, emitting more energy at visible wavelengths than the entire galaxy does, but the starburst is completely hidden by dense, overlying dust clouds. The direct radiation of the starburst can be measured only at far-infrared and radio wavelengths. At mid-infrared wavelengths, the Multiband Imaging Photometer on Spitzer can see hot dust, both close to the QSO and surrounding the young stars. At shorter infrared wavelengths, Spitzer’s Infrared Array Camera can also see the QSO. 95 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review CXO–J141741.9 is probably a pair of colliding galaxies in which perturbed gas clouds have burst into star formation and ignited a central black hole, producing the QSO. The intense releases of energy from both processes will probably sweep CXO–J141741.9 clean of gas after a few million years, which would mean that this galaxy is well on its way to becoming quenched, red, and dead. A new tool for classifying galaxies To find more objects like CXO–J141741.9, the AEGIS team has created a new tool to classify galaxy images in an objective, automated manner. The tool processes the brightness information in all the pixels of a galaxy’s image and decides what kind of galaxy it is. To classify galaxies as normal or disturbed, the tool measures the degree of clumpiness in the image and computes the center-to-edge brightness contrast ratio. It arranges the normal galaxies along a star-forming sequence. It identifies fully quenched, red-and-dead galaxies, as well as systems that are colliding. Preliminary results with this tool suggest that the collision rate has held steady over the last 9 billion years. If galaxy collisions are very efficient in producing in red-and-dead galaxies, then the observed collision rate could fully account for the observed rate of growth of the population of quenched galaxies. However, if only a fraction of galaxy collisions result in new red-and-dead galaxies, as we have reason to believe, then starvation by hot intergalactic gas in galaxy clusters may also be important. We expect that continuing analyses of AEGIS observations will help us resolve the true causes of quenching. 96 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Bir th o f fi rst ga lax ies 14 13 12 The Milky Way before the Sun and Earth formed 11 The AEGIS team is studying other properties of galaxy formation, too. in s ola rn eig hb 10 orh oo d QS O Er a From the new star-formation data, we find that each size of galaxy motions determined from Keck spectra, we find that only in the past few billion years have most disk galaxies (like our own Milky Way) sta rs stopped colliding with other galaxies and settled down to form or- old es t 9 of dered rotating disks. We are using the same spectra to measure how th fast these galaxies synthesized heavy elements and enriched their in- Bir 8 makes stars at a characteristic rate over cosmic time. From internal terstellar gas to the level needed to make planetary systems. While we 7 cannot look directly into the past to see our own galaxy forming and evolving, AEGIS data allow us to do the next-best thing—watch lookalikes of the Milky Way evolving billions of years ago, quite probably ste Sy so orm ve lo de Hubble looks out in space and back in time to observe star-formation rates in over 25,000 galaxies as they looked as long ago as half the age of the universe. Blue indicates regions where star formation is ongoing, red where it has been quenched. Typical galaxies are displayed in three time zones from the distant past to more recent times. The numbers along the central spine of the figure are “look-back” times in billions of years, i.e., the time light has traveled to reach us. In each zone—8–9, 6–7, and 3–5 billion years—a gap separates blue galaxies to the left and red-and-dead to the right. The number of red-and-dead galaxies increases with the passage of time, symbolized here by the increasing number of examples of red-and-dead galaxies—two, four, and six—in the three time zones. (The six red-and-dead galaxies at lowest redshift appear to be somewhat bluer than those at higher redshift. This is an artifact of data processing. They are still obviously redder than the six star-forming galaxies to the left.) The shapes of the blue star-forming galaxies become more regular as material settles into orderly, rotating disks. 0 Di no sa u rs 1 Ea rth 2 ps ox yg e na 3 tm os ph ere Lif ef 4 nE art h So lar 5 m bir th 6 leading to the formation of suns and solar systems like our own. 97 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Disturbed Light Distribution colliding blends spheroids disks Orderly Light Distribution Spatially Extended Spatially Compact 0.8 spheroids blends 0.6 disks Morphological Fraction colliding The wide variety of galactic shapes and sizes is one of the most striking features of the deep, high-resolution AEGIS image. The automatic classification tool assigns to normal looking galaxies the labels “spheroid,” “disk,” or “blend,” corresponding to normal nearby galaxies. The tool also measures the orderliness of the light distribution to identify colliding galaxies. Out to 9 billion years ago, more than 90% of galaxies have normal types and only 7% appear to be colliding. However, the number of spheroids more than doubles over the same time, probably due to collisions that result in mergers. 0.4 0.2 0.0 2 4 6 Lookback Time in Billion Years 8 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Sandra Faber is University Professor at the University of California, and Astronomer/Professor at the University of California Observatories, UC Santa Cruz. She has used the Hubble Space Telescope to discover black holes at the centers of galaxies and to study distant galaxy evolution. She is CoPrincipal Investigator of the DEEP 2 redshift survey and PI of the DEIMOS spectrograph, which was used for the survey. Marc Davis is Professor of Astronomy and Physics at UC Berkeley. He is a pioneer in redshift surveys and the analysis of galaxy clustering. He is the Principal Investigator of the DEEP 2 redshift survey, which is designed to study the evolution of galaxy properties and galaxy clustering as the universe evolved. Davis is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. 99 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Outflows from Active Galactic Nuclei Nahum Arav Deep in the heart of nearly every large galaxy lurks a giant black hole weighing as much as a million to a billion suns. (A black hole is a collapsed astronomical body, so dense that no light can escape from it.) In a small fraction of galaxies, interactions of gas with the black hole somehow trigger violent outflows, ejecting material from the galaxy at very high speed. The origin of outflows, and their lasting effects on galaxies, are among the most hotly debated topics in astronomy today. The study of these outflows dates back to 1967, when Roger Lynds, an astronomer at the National Optical Astronomy Observatory, uncovered unusual spectral features in the light of “quasi-stellar objects” or QSOs. There was intense scrutiny on QSOs following Maarten Schmidt’s discovery, four years earlier, that these were the most distant objects known in the universe. (See Perlman’s article on galactic jets.) Lynds discovered that in some QSOs, a large portion of their light was absorbed and scattered by intervening gas, leading to broad absorption “troughs” in the spectrum. Spectra like this had never been seen before in any astronomical object. We now know that these troughs are signatures of prodigious outflows of material driven by the same unseen engines that produce the brilliant light of QSOs—supermassive black holes. Furthermore, we know QSOs are extreme members of the family of “active galactic nuclei,” or AGN, and that most galaxies harbor supermassive black holes at their centers. Lynds’s troughs are due to absorption by neutral and ionized atoms along the line of sight to the AGN. Today, astronomers continue to use absorption-line spectroscopy of AGN—the perfect background light sources, with no spectral absorption features of their own—to study these outflows. The galaxy known as Centaurus A was one of the first galaxies identified whose core strongly emits radiation from radio to x-ray wavelengths. Complex mechanisms operate near the massive black holes at the centers of such galaxies, producing enormous jets and outflows of material. Here, the center of the galaxy—actually thought to be two merging galaxies—is obscured by dark lanes of dust and gas. 101 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review This picture of a typical quasi-stellar object, or “QSO,” was Hubble’s 100,000th observation, taken on June 22, 1996. Of the two bright, star-like objects, the one on the left is the QSO, and the one on the right is a star in our own galaxy. From the cosmological redshift in its spectrum, we know that the QSO is about a million times farther away than the star (and also much farther away than the pretty spiral galaxy at the top). Because the apparent brightness of a source varies inversely as the square of its distance, and because the star and QSO appear about equally bright, we can infer that the intrinsic brightness of the QSO is a trillion times greater than the star. (The four bright spikes on each object are due to the optics of the telescope.) We picture a supermassive black hole as a voracious feeder on the stars and gas from its surrounding galaxy. This material falls toward the black hole and fills an accretion disk. While we cannot detect a black hole directly, we can see the accretion disk, which converts a portion of the gravitational energy released from in-falling material into heat and light. This electromagnetic radiation emerges as the bright light of AGN—or in the most luminous cases, QSOs, which far outshine their host galaxies. 102 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review We also observe AGN ejecting material by two powerful processes: jets and outflows. We observe jets directly, as linear features consisting of fully ionized gas moving at nearly the speed of light. We observe outflows indirectly, as absorption features in the spectra of AGN. Outflows consist of partially ionized gas moving outward at lower speeds than jets, but still up to one-third the speed of light. (“Partially ionized” means some bound electrons, which are required to produce spectral lines.) The total amount of energy released in feeding the black hole is much larger than the gravitational binding energy of the galaxy. Jets and outflows carry this energy to the far reaches of a galaxy. While most of the light from the AGN escapes without interacting strongly with the galaxy, the jets and outflows—because of their material nature—do interact strongly, particularly with the interstellar gas. If only a small fraction of the released energy is imparted to the gas, it would be driven out, altering the course of the galaxy’s physical and chemical development. (See the accompanying article on “red-anddead” galaxies by Davis and Faber.) Observations from Hubble and other observatories have revealed that most large galaxies today harbor supermassive black holes in the center, but only a small percentage of these are accreting large enough amounts of material to appear as active nuclei. Observations of the distant universe reveal that the nuclei of galaxies were more active in the past. (See the accompanying article by Barger on AGN populations.) These observations are consistent, because the jets and outflows produced by AGN are feedback processes—meaning that they can slow down the supply of material feeding the black hole, thereby lowering the level of nuclear “activity” and shutting down the jets and outflows. We seek a better physical understanding of AGN jets (see accompanying article by Perlman) and outflows (as in this article) in order to learn how they may have contributed to the development of early galaxies into the nearby galaxies we see today. Because images of QSOs reveal only point-like sources, we turn to their spectra—brightness according to wavelength—in order to study their characteristics. Laboratory measurements allow us to identify the position and relative strength of the spectral features caused by different atoms and ions. Using these laboratory results, we can interpret the troughs in AGN spectra and translate them into estimates of the physical parameters of the outflow, including the speed, temperature, density, distance from the AGN, rate of mass outflow, and kinetic energy. 103 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review SDSS J0402-0641 LyA z=2.432 C IV Si IV C III Lya = Lyman alpha line of hydrogen Intervening z=2.2845 C iv = triply ionized carbon (three electrons removed) C iii = doubly ionized carbon (two electrons removed) Brightness Si iv = triply ionized silicon (three electrons removed) LyA z=2.590 SDSS J1537+5829 N v = quadruply ionized nitrogen (four electrons removed) C IV Si IV C III LyA NV 4000 Si IV 4500 5000 Intervening z=1.2462 C IV 5500 6000 Observed Wavelength (Å) 104 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review 6500 7000 Guide to a QSO spectrum The spectrum of a QSO divides the light into different colors to measure the brightness versus wavelength and identify diagnostic features. The top panel shows a typical QSO spectrum with no evidence of outflows. The brightness rises slowly towards the blue. Superimposed are emission lines of hydrogen atoms, triply ionized silicon, and doubly and triply ionized carbon (labeled in yellow), which originate on the accretion disk immediately around the supermassive black hole. The great distance of the QSO is evident in the large redshift, z = 2.432, which tells us that the light from this QSO started its journey towards us 11 billion years ago, or about 7 billion years before the Sun and Earth were formed. In the laboratory, the C iv line is located at 1549 Å, but because of the redshift of this QSO, we observe it at (1 + z) 1549 = 5316 Å. At some point along its path towards us, the QSO’s light encountered intervening clouds of gas, which produced a few absorption features at a somewhat lower redshift, z = 2.2845. These clouds are hundreds of millions of light-years away from the QSO and not physically related to it. The bottom panel shows a QSO spectrum containing evidence for a massive outflow: absorption troughs due to Lyα, N v, S iv, and C iv (labeled in blue), located on the blue side of corresponding emission features. The magnitude of the blue shift indicates the absorbing material is moving towards us at speeds up to 6000 km per second relative to the QSO accretion disk. These troughs are caused by outflows of material in or near the QSO that happen to be on the line of sight to the active nucleus—the supermassive black hole and its luminous accretion disk—at the center of the unseen host galaxy. By studying the troughs in QSO spectra, we can determine physical parameters of the outflows, including temperature, distance from the QSO, rate of mass outflow, and kinetic energy. 105 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The early spectroscopic interpretations by Lynds established the significance of AGN outflows. Because the wavelengths of the absorption troughs are close to those of the AGN emission, he could deduce that the absorbing material is associated with the AGN. Because the trough wavelengths are also somewhat shorter (bluer) than those of the emission lines, he knew that the material is moving toward us. Furthermore, the amount of blue shift measures the outflow velocity and the width of the trough indicates the spread of line-of-sight speeds, which can be tens of thousands of kilometers per second. This is much larger than the speed needed to escape the gravity of the host galaxies! Many of the most useful absorption lines of outflows are in the ultraviolet spectral range. Before Hubble, most spectra of outflows were obtained by observing AGN with substantial redshifts. Such observations took advantage of the cosmological redshift to move the ultraviolet features into the visible range convenient for ground-based observatories. The advent of Hubble instigated a revolution in the study of galactic outflows, because it could observe closer and brighter AGN in the native ultraviolet range of the spectral troughs. While it was operating (between 1997 and 2004), the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS) on Hubble was the premier instrument for observing AGN outflows. Its great spectral resolving power produced highly detailed profiles of the absorption troughs, which allowed astronomers to separate geometrical effects from the thickness of the outflow, and thereby to better estimate the amount of gas involved in the flow. It could obtain high-quality spectra from 1100 Å to 3200 Å in the ultraviolet, which allowed astronomers not only to target closer AGN, but also to observe many spectral lines that previously could not be detected. Because closer AGN appear brighter, astronomers could obtain spectra of the same objects with the new generation of x-ray observatories, including Chandra. If the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph is installed, or if the STIS is repaired on a future servicing mission to Hubble, this line of research can resume. The Hubble observations have addressed a list of fundamental questions about outflows, summarized as follows: What are the speeds? We find a big spread, from a few hundred to over a hundred thousand kilometers per second. The higher speeds may pertain to material closer to the black hole, while outflows at greater distance may be slowed down by an increasing burden of matter as they plow through the host galaxy. 106 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review BRIGHTNESS SPECTRUM ABSORPTION TROUGH WAVELENGTH Best current explanation for creating the troughs observed in the spectra of active galactic nuclei. Material (reddish clouds) falls toward the supermassive black hole (black dot). As it approaches the black hole, this matter forms a bright accretion disk (yellow). The pressure of light ejects some material from the disk (white arrows are typical trajectories). Outflowing atoms and ions located at the blue portions of the trajectories are in the line of sight from the telescope to the disk. Light that is absorbed by the blue material, at wavelengths characteristic of the elements and the speed of the outflow, causes the absorption trough seen in the spectrum. Thus, interplay between geometry and moving material produces the trough seen in the inset graph. (Figure by Daniel Zukowski.) 107 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review What is the material in the outflows? We find ordinary elements in various states of ionization. The relative amount of heavy elements is somewhat larger than that of the Sun. This result indicates vigorous star formation in the vicinity of the AGN, and offers a special opportunity to study chemically enriched environments when the universe was less than 10% of its current age. How far are the outflows from the black hole? We observe some outflows only a light-day away from the black hole—roughly five times the distance of Pluto from the Sun. We see others at tens of thousands of light-years away—the typical size of a host galaxy. These results are consistent with our picture that the high speed and momentum of AGN outflows carry them with continuity from the accretion disk to the far reaches of the galaxy. The travel time would be a hundred thousand to a million years. What accelerates the outflows? Here, we are less certain, but the favored answer is the pressure of light. The great luminosity of the AGN pushes steadily on the gas and gradually accelerates it to high speed. Do outflows really affect the growth of the black hole and the host galaxy? Theoretically, yes. In simulations, outflows can regulate the growth of both the black hole and the host galaxy. We are, however, still some distance from demonstrating that real AGN outflows carry enough energy and mass to play these roles. This is our main challenge in the coming decade. Nahum Arav is a Research Professor at the Center for Astrophysics and Space Science at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He has been researching AGN outflows for more than a decade. His work includes observations with the Hubble Space Telescope, the Chandra X-ray Observatory, the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer satellite, and ground-based telescopes, as well as theoretical studies. When not researching AGN outflows, Nahum can be found in the Colorado mountains—hiking and backpacking (in the summer), or skiing (in the winter). 108 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review These Hubble snapshots reveal dramatic activities within the core of the galaxy NGC 3079, where a lumpy bubble of hot gas is rising from a cauldron of glowing matter. Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Galactic Jets Eric Perlman Hubble’s 1993 images of the host galaxies of “quasi-stellar objects” (QSOs) cemented the link between QSOs and active galactic nuclei (AGN), which are central regions of galaxies that emit light strongly all across the spectrum, from radio waves to x-rays. For years before the advent of Hubble, astronomers conjectured that AGN were accretion disks in the process of capturing gas and feeding it to black holes—collapsed objects so dense that no light can escape their gravitational pull. In 1994, in another of its early coups, Hubble took pictures of the active galaxy M87 that revealed the AGN to be a spiral disk. Analysis of spectral data taken from opposite sides of the disk found evidence for a strong reversal of velocity, consistent with orbital motion under the force of gravity. The high orbital speed of the disk implied a central mass of 3 billion Suns gathered in a volume smaller than the Solar System. This discovery lent support to the concept of AGN as bright, swirling fields of cosmic debris, spiraling into an unseen, bottomless drain created by a supermassive black hole. (Since these early Hubble investigations, still stronger confirmation of the existence of black holes has come from x-ray spectra of hot gas circling close to the black-hole event horizon—the surface from which no light or matter can emerge.) Active galaxies exhibit other energetic phenomena besides great brightness at their centers, including narrow, high-speed jets of material (described in this article) and slower-moving outflows that cover a much larger area (see the accompanying article by Arav). Streaming out from the center of the galaxy M87 like a cosmic searchlight is one of nature’s most amazing phenomena, a black-hole-powered jet of electrons and other sub-atomic particles traveling at nearly the speed of light. This article describes how Hubble is contributing to their understanding. 111 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review ACS WFPC2 3C 273 M87 Quasi-stellar object 3C 273 and the large elliptical galaxy M87 were two of the first objects to be identified with jet-like structures, as the sidebar on the next page explains. The image on the left is a composite of two Hubble images, one by the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2), and one by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS). The ACS image was taken using its coronagraph—an instrument channel that places a black disk in front of a bright object in order to view faint details nearby. Jets and outflows have important influence on galaxy evolution because of the vast energy they transport from the AGN, through the surrounding galaxy, and out into intergalactic space. In the process, they sweep away interstellar gas. They can cause additional gas to be blasted away by the supernovae that occur in the aftermath of star formation, which may be instigated by the impact of jets and outflows on dense interstellar clouds. The end result of gas removal may be a transformed galaxy—“red and dead” in the terminology of the accompanying article by Davis and Faber. Such a galaxy can form no more stars because of lack of gas. Furthermore, fuel ceases to fall towards the black hole, which can stall the AGN. Meanwhile, the surrounding intergalactic gas and dust is strongly heated by the vast energy ultimately deposited beyond the galaxy by outflows and jets. 112 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Galaxies, QSOs, Black Holes, and Jets In the history of astronomy, Michigan-born Heber Curtis is best known for taking the correct side in a highly publicized 1920 debate with fellow astronomer Harlow Shapley regarding the scale of the universe and the nature of spiral nebulae. He argued that they were galaxies beyond our own, which now we know is true. Curtis’s role in other areas of astrophysics is less well known, yet his seminal study of jets has lasting significance. Two years before the famous debate, he noticed a linear feature in photographs of a bright nebula in the constellation Virgo known as M87—a “curious straight ray,” he called it—aligned with the nebula’s bright core. This was the first discovery of a galactic jet, one of nature’s most powerful phenomena. In the late 1940s, Australian astronomers studying the sky at radio frequencies sought to identify cosmic radio sources by timing lunar occultations—the moments that the radio signals were eclipsed by the passing Moon. In this way, they established that M87 and the strong radio source Virgo A are, in fact, the same object. In 1962, they measured the celestial position of 3C 273, another strong radio source in the constellation Virgo. The next year, working from Mt. Palomar, Cal Tech astronomer Maarten Schmidt reported a star-like object at that position, and noted its jet-like feature; 3C 273 was the first “quasar” or quasi-stellar object (QSO) to be discovered. Its distance was the greatest ever measured to that date—about 2 billion light-years—implying a prodigious energy output a hundred times brighter than the most luminous known galaxy, and radiating as much energy per second as a large galaxy of hundreds of billions of stars. Two years later, Carnegie astronomer Allan Sandage showed that the optical light of 3C 273 varied in brightness on timescales of months, meaning that this immense power must emerge from a region only light-months across. This was the first hint that the ultimate power source for these objects might be the gravitational energy released by a massive black hole in the process of accreting matter. Black holes are bodies so dense and massive that even light itself cannot escape their gravitational pull. The clear similarities between M87 and 3C 273—bright radio sources, aligned jets, and sharp, bright cores—suggested that the QSOs resided in the center of an unseen host galaxy, which was indeed revealed by Hubble in 1993, two years after its launch. 113 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Jets appear as brilliant, narrow beams—a spine with knots—shooting out from the AGN of host galaxies. The spine is the linear organization of the light, and the knots are bright condensations—large and small—along the spine. From the apparent displacement of knots between observations taken at different times, astronomers know that the material in jets moves at astonishing speeds, nearly up to the speed of light. Some jets are as long as a million light-years end to end, which is 10 times the diameter of our own Milky Way galaxy. The linearity and the alignment of galactic jets with the AGN—the black hole and accretion disk—must be due to the magnetic forces experienced by charged particles in motion. While ions and electrons move freely along magnetic field lines, they move only with great resistance across them. Because the particles and fields react against each other, the ionized gas of the accretion disk traps the magnetic field lines and wraps them up as the disk revolves. The same principle confines the ionized gas of jets in a twisted rope of magnetic field lines, even at great distances from the black hole. 3C 273 M87 Multispectral appearances of portions of the jets of M87 and 3C 273. These panels were assembled from data from the Very Large Array (radio waves; red), Spitzer (infrared; yellow), Hubble (visible; green) and Chandra (x-ray; blue). Redder shades represent regions that are brighter in the infrared and/or radio, and bluer shades represent regions that are brighter in x-rays. Such multispectral images allow astronomers to study the spatial relationships of higher and lower energy regions in jets. For 3C 273, the quasar itself is well off the image to the left. (Image credit: E. Perlman, Y. Uchiyama.) 114 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Schematic structure of the core of an active galaxy. (Illustration credit: John Biretta.) 115 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review The broad, smooth spectra of jets—their distributions of intensity with wavelength—suggest that jet light is produced by accelerated electrons spiraling along magnetic field lines. Light produced in this manner is called “synchrotron radiation,” because it was first observed in 1947 in a laboratory device for accelerating electrons called a “synchrotron.” Synchrotron radiation provides another diagnostic tool for studying jets: polarimetry, which is the measurement of the direction of the vibration of an electromagnetic wave (light). Synchrotron radiation is strongly polarized by the magnetic field. By measuring the degree of polarization and its direction, astronomers can estimate the dominant direction of the magnetic field at any point in the image of a jet. Furthermore, the regions of a jet that display stronger polarization are likely to be regions with the more orderly magnetic field. Conversely, where the polarization is weaker, but the synchrotron radiation is still bright, astronomers can infer less uniformity and greater disorder in the magnetic field. Before Hubble, radio astronomers had discovered dozens of galactic jets like those of M87 and 3C 273, the first identified QSO. Still, only five jets had been identified at optical or shorter wavelengths, and almost nothing was known about their physical mechanisms and energy sources. In the 16 years since Hubble was launched, astronomers have produced images of over 50 jets in radio, infrared, optical, and x-ray emissions. Of these, the historic jets of M87 and 3C 273 are still the best-studied and most compelling examples. Even though galactic jets are very luminous, it is maddeningly difficult to obtain physical information about them from their light. Spectroscopy is ineffective, because the jet material is so hot that the atoms have been fully ionized—stripped of all electrons. Therefore, jets produce no spectral lines, which astronomers customarily use to measure composition, density, temperature, and motion along the line of sight. Nevertheless, images of jets do reveal movement, varying appearance at different wavelengths, and sudden flare-ups. For example, between 2000 and 2005, a knot in the M87 jet increased in brightness nearly a hundredfold at both optical and x-ray wavelengths—bright enough to outshine the AGN core, located about 200 light-years away. Astronomers strive to learn what they can from such phenomena about the structures, sizes, dynamical processes, and light production of jets. 116 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review M87 1999 2005 A flare in the jet of M87. The innermost 1,000 light-years of the M87 jet, as seen in 1999 and 2005. The flaring component “HST-1” is indicated by the yellow shading. The nucleus is located near the left edge of both panels. The contrast in the bottom panel has been decreased by a factor of 10 to emphasize the dramatic nature of the flare, which entailed a brightening by nearly a factor of 100. Optical and x-ray emission removes energy from jets. Yet they remain luminous, which means some refueling or reacceleration process must continue to operate throughout the jet to accelerate the high-energy electrons. Astronomers do not know what this process is. Nevertheless, they are discovering some clues that should be helpful in understanding the flow and balance of energy in jets. One clue is that knots appear smaller at shorter wavelengths. Because radiation at shorter wavelengths is more energetic than at longer ones, this must mean that the regions producing higher energy radiation are smaller. For the M87 jet, astronomers have observed this trend in Hubble images through the visible range, continuing all the way to the x-ray range, as documented in Chandra images. 117 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review A second clue is a recurrent pattern of optical polarization around knots. The typical knot itself shows low polarization at its brightest point, associating magnetic disorder with increased emission. Just upstream of the knot, the polarization is seen to peak, and the magnetic field is observed to be aligned perpendicular to the spine, suggesting a transition region—a shock or compression—between the knot and the smooth flow into it. Downstream from the knot, the magnetic field again relaxes parallel to the flow. This pattern is not observed at radio wavelengths, where there is much less variation in the amount and direction of polarization near knots. This implies that the electrons that emit high-energy radiation (optical and x-ray) do not occupy the same volume as the lower-energy electrons producing radio waves. In other words, the optical and radio emitting electrons do not occupy the same physical space, and the higher-energy electrons occupy regions closer to the central spine of the jet. This is consistent with the finding that the regions of particle accelerations are progressively smaller at higher energies. A third clue, found recently by Hubble, Chandra, and the Spitzer infrared observatory, is that jets are bluer closer to the black hole and redder farther out. (“Bluer” means a higher ratio of shorter wavelength radiation to longer, and “redder” means the opposite.) This pattern, seen in both M87 and 3C 273, suggests a gradual loss of energy by the jet particles as the flow moves out from the nucleus. Sixteen years of Hubble observations, supported by the other NASA Great Observatories in space and great radio telescopes on the ground, have revolutionized the study of jets. Astronomers now directly observe the high-energy processes that link emission, structure, and magnetic fields. Many puzzles remain, including the material composition of the jets, and the flow of energy from its original source near the black hole to the distant locations where it is emitted. If NASA successfully conducts another servicing mission to Hubble and installs the waiting Cosmic Origins Spectrograph and Wide Field Camera 3, astronomers will have powerful new tools to work on these puzzles. 118 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Distance from Nucleus (arcsec) 0 20% 40% 3 2 1 0 –1 –2 –3 0 5 10 15 20 Distance from Nucleus (arcsec) Polarization image of the M87 jet, obtained with Hubble. Red contours represent regions of high polarization, while blue colors represent regions of low polarization (color scale shown at top). Contours are lines of constant optical brightness of the jet at visible wavelengths. Regions of maximum polarization are usually located upstream (to the left) of the brightest point in a knot, where the magnetic field (not shown) is perpendicular to the jet. Much lower—or no—polarization is observed at the brightest point in each knot. The magnetic field is parallel to the jet downstream of each knot’s brightest point. (At the distance of M87, 1 arc second translates to about 250 light-years.) Eric Perlman is an Associate Professor of Physics and Space Sciences at the Florida Institute of Technology. Over the last 10 years he has worked extensively on jets, using Hubble, the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and other telescopes. In 2000 and 2005, he was awarded five-year grants from NASA’s Long-Term Space Astrophysics Program to pursue this work. 119 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Supporting Hubble Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Outlaw Network Administrator Raytheon Daria Outlaw grew up in eastern North Carolina and came to NASA with a Bachelor’s degree in Business Management and Administration from North Carolina Central University, in Durham. She joined the Hubble family in 1997 as a specialist in information technology, with the Raytheon Corporation. She works on the Hubble local area network, providing desktop, network, and technical support. While her specialty is Apple Macintosh support, she also has responsibility for audio-video conferencing systems. Daria works with Hubble staff at all levels, and takes satisfaction and pleasure at how the diversity of skills, interests, and backgrounds in the project contributes to making the perfect team. She’s proud to work on a project that provides so much fascinating knowledge about our universe to the science community, schools, and the population at large. “It’s very personally motivating for me to work so close to the source of all this great information that the public desires.” Daria has many outside interests. For the past year, she has taught a weekly computer class as a volunteer at a local women’s shelter. She also helps out at her daughter’s high school as a parent volunteer. She is active in her church, where she works as an advisor and activities coordinator in the children’s and youth ministries. To maintain sanity in a busy life, Daria recommends—and makes a practice of—taking two vacations annually. “Vacations are relaxation for the mind, body, and soul,” she likes to say. For her, the first break is for quality time with her daughter, Ebonee. The second is for down time, for herself or with close friends. Her favorite places for holidays are tropical and warm—or Europe. Daria also enjoys exploring the countryside by motorcycle. Page 120–121: Located about 690 light years away in the constellation of Aquarius, the Helix Nebula, NGC 7293, is the result of a complex series of gaseous outbursts from its central star. The striated appearance of the inner rim is caused by a hot “stellar wind” of gas plowing into colder shells of gas and dust ejected previously by the volatile star. 122 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Campbell Operations & Institutional Services Manager NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Dave Campbell was born and raised in Buffalo, New York. He started at NASA in 1983, fresh out of Morgan State University with a B.S. degree in Computer Science. He joined the Control Center Systems Branch, which is responsible for the design and implementation of control centers for spacecraft in low Earth orbit. Dave’s first assignment was the early implementation of the Hubble operations control center. During that time, he also earned a second B.S. degree, in Electrical Engineering from the Johns Hopkins University. Over the next eight years, he helped develop the computer and network components that were incorporated in the ground systems of several missions managed by Goddard, including the Cosmic Background Explorer and the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. “I guess I had the classic engineer attitude growing up,” Dave explains, “I loved science and math, but disliked English classes. When I was a kid, I loved taking things apart and putting them back together again. I was fascinated by the mechanics of how things worked. Even at the age of 12, I was extending and re-routing the telephone connections throughout the house.” Dave completed an M.S. in Engineering Management in 1991, when he the became the Project Manager responsible for the real-time system in the control center for the Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer. Later, he returned to the Hubble project as the Deputy Operations and Testing Manager for the second servicing mission. Following that mission, he worked on the Earth Observing System for a few years before returning to Hubble for a third time, as the Deputy Manager for Operations Support. Dave is currently the manager of the office responsible for the integrity of the operational ground system that controls the Hubble spacecraft, and for the network and voice communications in the day-to-day Hubble control center. “Looking back on things, my dad was probably the biggest influence on me toward pursuing a career in engineering. He was an engineer, and I was very proud of him. It was guidance from my mom, though, that helped mold me into who I am today.” Dave lives in Clarksville, Maryland, with his wife and two children. He enjoys playing tennis, bike riding with his eight-year-old son and five-year-old daughter, swimming, and entertaining friends. 123 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Taylor Head of the Observation Planning Branch Space Telescope Science Institute Denise Taylor grew up near Norfolk, Virginia. Her high school physics teacher sparked her interest in astronomy with field trips to the local planetarium. After obtaining a Bachelor’s degree in Physics and Astronomy from the University of Virginia, Denise spent a year teaching physics and algebra at a military school in northern Virginia. There, she learned downhill skiing and minor auto repair (thanks to students’ practical jokes). After that, she studied stellar evolution and star formation in spiral galaxies at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst, gaining an M.S. in Physics, an M.S. in Astronomy, and a husband (Engineering and Software Services Resource Manager, Dave Taylor). For four years, Denise was the Assistant Director of Elementary Physics Laboratories at Mount Holyoke College in South Hadley, Massachusetts, in an otherwise all-male physics department for an all-female college. Her love of teaching brought her to Mount Holyoke’s SummerMath program for several summers, where she developed and taught an astronomy class for high school girls. In 1989, Denise became the first Telescope Operations Assistant for the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. For over two years, she assisted astronomers in planning their IUE observations and filling data gaps. Denise came to the Institute in 1992 as a Technical Assistant. She became expert in implementing Hubble proposals using the High Speed Photometer, an original Hubble science instrument. She then took over all science and calibration proposals using the Fine Guidance Sensors (FGS), working closely with the Space Telescope Astrometry Team at the University of Texas in Austin. In 1994, as one of the first Senior Program Coordinators, Denise was responsible for implementing science and calibration proposals for the FGS, Faint Object Spectrograph, and Wide Field Planetary Camera 2. She also helped develop operational processes for analyzing bright-object alerts on all instruments. Later, she worked on proposals for the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer. The year 1997 saw her move to Calibration Manager, coordinating the implementation and scheduling of all calibrations of scientific instruments. Denise has been the Head of the Observation Planning Branch since 1999, supervising Program Coordinators, assisting in long-range planning, and developing policies and procedures for Hubble users. Denise’s outside interests no longer include skiing. She finds reading and quilting to be relaxing, and enjoys spending time with her husband and son. 124 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Barcus Launch Support Manager NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Jim Barcus was born in Cheverly, Maryland, just a few miles from Goddard Space Flight Center. He graduated from St. John’s College High School and Prince George’s Community College. He has worked at Goddard since 1968 and has been a part of the Hubble family since 1991. As Launch Support Manager on the Hubble development project, Jim is responsible for Hubble ground and flight hardware worth over $2.5 billion. He has performed logistical support for every Hubble-related shuttle mission—including the high-profile STS-95 mission, which carried Senator John Glenn and tested new Hubble equipment on orbit. Jim is affectionately known as the “Radar O’Reilly” of the Hubble program for his resourcefulness and uncanny ability to anticipate the program’s needs. In addition to coordinating the movement of more than 400 truckloads of Hubble equipment, he sometimes orchestrates domestic and international transportation of Hubble hardware aboard C-5 military cargo planes and seafaring barges. “As a kid, I used to lay out on the lawn during summer nights to look up at the stars and imagine what it would be like to see them up close. Contributing to Hubble’s development, I feel as though I’ve come as close to realizing that dream as one could without becoming an astronaut,” says Jim. “I feel a real sense of pride playing a small part in the goal of unraveling the mysteries of the universe. It’s also gratifying to know that the technologies we develop for Hubble benefit people in other ways. For example, I understand the sensitive instrument detectors developed for the Hubble cameras are also being used by the medical community to perform tissue analysis without the need for surgery. This is really great!” Outside of work, Jim is an avid softball player—still competing after 38 years of team play. He enjoys landscaping around his new home on the water in Delaware, and relaxing at the beach with Linda and their grown children. 125 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Moy Safing Systems Engineer Lockheed Martin Ed Moy began working on Hubble over 20 years ago, as a Research Engineer for Lockheed Missiles and Space Company. He helped develop and test the pointing-control system. From 1986 until launch in 1990, he was responsible for refurbishing and integrating the independent safe-mode computer. This serves as a critical backup to the primary operational computer in detecting and responding to anomalous spacecraft conditions. Ed supported the Hubble launch at the Marshall Space Flight Center, serving as Lead Pointing-Control Engineer. He was a key player during operational verification. Following his return to Sunnyvale, California, he helped develop and test the fix for spacecraft jitter caused by the solar arrays. He also helped improve the safe-mode design by developing and testing multiple schemes for stabilizing the spacecraft on the Sun—without using the gyroscopes. In 1993, Ed came to Goddard as a System Engineer for the safing subsystem. He supported all four servicing missions in that position. This involved developing procedures for analyzing and responding to faults in advance of the missions, as well as providing real-time support at the console during the actual missions. Ed continues to work on the design, testing, and analysis of the pointing-control and safing subsystems of the Hubble spacecraft. He works to refine and improve control modes based on fewer than the normal three gyroscopes—in case of failures. These designs include the one- and two-gyro science modes, and the “Kalman filter Sun-point mode.” Ed says a trusted graduate professor helped form his vision of pursuing a career in spacecraft design. “The Hubble operations and engineering teams always seem to be able to perform the impossible,” he says. “It is very rewarding to work daily with such a capable crew, and to know that our work enables major astronomical discoveries.” Ed currently resides in Elkridge, Maryland, with his wife and their child. Among his outside interests are playing basketball and pursuing other outdoor activities. He enjoys spending his spare time with family and friends. 126 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Spencer Administrative Assistant, Science Missions Division Space Telescope Science Institute Darlene Spencer was born and raised in Baltimore, Maryland. She joined the Space Telescope Science Institute in February 1989 as a temporary employee, and was hired full time in June of the same year. She is an Administrative Assistant in the Science Missions Division, in charge of logistical support and arrangements for the annual peer review of Hubble proposals. Darlene’s responsibilities for the peer review include receiving proposals, handling sensitive review materials, maintaining comprehensive databases, and setting up the meetings of the disciplinary panels and the Telescope Allocation Committee, which evaluate proposals and make recommendations to the director of the Institute. Darlene coordinates the scrupulous process of selecting Hubble’s observations for the coming year, and ensures that it runs efficiently. This year, during one week in March, 109 astronomers met in Baltimore for the peer review, and allocated observing time to 206 proposals out of a total of 733 submitted. The process ran smoothly, and the successful proposers were notified of their selection within 10 days of the final review session. During her time at the Institute, Darlene witnessed the momentous transition from paper submission of proposals to the totally electronic version. This change brought welcome relief from the tedious tasks of filing, proofing, and mailing 30 hard copies of each proposal. Darlene also supports the Hubble and Institute Fellowship programs. In addition to her administrative work, she arranges the meetings of the review panels that select the fellows, and organizes the annual Hubble Symposium, where Hubble Fellows meet each other and present their research. Darlene is strongly involved in her community. She teaches children ages three to six, and actively participates in ministries at the Central Church of Christ. Her hobbies consist of shopping, traveling, reading religious, inspirational, and motivational books, listening to music, and collecting snow globes and state magnets. Darlene resides in Owings Mills, Maryland, with one of her daughters, Dwayaa’. She spends much joyful time with her granddaughter ZaRiah, the child of her second daughter, Unique. 127 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Pataro Lead, Flight Operations Support Team Lockheed Martin Very few people who work at the Goddard Space Flight Center have been around as long as Pete Pataro. He started in 1967, as a member of the network support team for the operations center of the Apollo program. He worked on all the Apollo missions, from the early Saturn V test flights through the final moon landing of Apollo 17. He then moved on to the Apollo-Soyuz, Skylab, and the shuttle programs before joining the next great program to come to Goddard—Hubble—in 1985. Pete is part of the flight-operations group for Hubble. He started on the console, as a flight controller responsible for operating the data management and communications systems of the spacecraft. Later, he became a shift supervisor, and served in that capacity for the Hubble deployment and first servicing missions. For the second through fourth servicing missions, he again served on the console, coordinating between the Goddard Hubble team and the payload officer at the Johnson Space Center. Pete is now a member of the Operations Support Team under the Lockheed Martin Systems Management Office. He manages the daily use of the operational and backup ground systems, and is the point of contact between the flight operations team and external operational organizations, including the Space Telescope Science Institute, the Tracking Data and Relay Satellite System, the Deep Space Network, the NASA Ground Network, and the NASA Communications and Internet Network. Pete once said in an interview: “Working with the Hubble team on this project is the highlight of a great career. To be part of something that makes history every day is the best place in the world to be. When people ask and I tell them what I do, they always say that my job sounds like a lot of fun—and you know what? It is!” Pete’s love for aeronautics began at an early age; his father was in the U.S. Air Force, and Pete grew up on Air Force bases, where the latest planes, avionics, and electronics were constant topics. When not supporting Hubble, Pete and his wife, Alice, enjoy visiting inspiring places to study American history, and seeking out good restaurants to enjoy a meal and discuss what they have learned. Pete also enjoys hiking in the Blue Ridge Mountains and along the Appalachian Trail, fly-fishing in Pennsylvania’s fabled limestone streams and creeks, and reading everything from Harry Potter books to the history of the 8th Air Force. 128 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Plants Resources Analyst NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Jean Plants was born and raised in Maryland and graduated from the University of Maryland, College Park with a Bachelor’s degree in Economics. After graduation, she began working for the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. Two years of commuting to Washington, DC, made Jean envious of her husband’s 15-minute commute to Goddard Space Flight Center. Along with first-hand knowledge that Goddard is a great place to work, the easy commute made it a logical place to search for a job when she began to plan a career move. In 1987, she accepted a position as a Cost and Price Analyst in the Procurement Support Division. Four years later, Jean switched to a role in resources and budgeting. Shortly thereafter, Jean became a Resources Analyst for the Communications Division, taking on financial responsibilities for a $72 million budget. Jean joined the Hubble team in 2000 as a Resources Analyst in the Operations Project. For five years, she served as the analyst for the major contract providing for the day-to-day operations of the telescope, including the development and maintenance of its ground system. Jean prepared yearly budget estimates for the contract, monitored its monthly costs and funding needs, and supported procurement actions—all the while keeping the contract synchronized with the project’s requirements. Last fall, Jean became the resources analyst on the Space Telescope Science Institute contract. The contract scope includes solicitation of observation proposals, allocation of telescope time, implementation of the weekly observing plans, and creation of processed data products. Jean considers herself very fortunate to work for Hubble and is continually amazed by the engineering behind operating and servicing the observatory—and by the incredible science it produces. “I am a nature lover,” she explains. “My kids get tired of me ‘oohing’ and ‘aahing’ over the scenery we travel through—the sunsets, clouds, stars, mountains, lakes, birds—endless natural beauty. NASA brings the beauty of the universe to us all. For me, it shows the awesome power of God. As a non-scientist and non-engineer who could be doing budgeting work for any type of organization, I count myself as really blessed to be able to do what I do for NASA and Hubble.” Jean and her husband, Michael, celebrated their 20th anniversary this year and are the proud parents of Kacie, 14, and Julia, 12. Jean and her family live in Ellicott City, Maryland, and enjoy camping, music, playing games, and visiting with their extended family. 129 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Coleman Operations Systems Management Manager Honeywell Technolgy Solutions, Inc. Pat Coleman’s interest in space and astronomy started when she was young. She remembers being inspired by the children’s book she was given, You Will Go to the Moon by Mae Blacker Freeman. It wasn’t until she watched the touchdown of the first space shuttle flight, however, that she realized it was really time for her to get involved. It was then that Pat made a major career change, deciding to give up teaching, which she had done for 10 years, and pursue aerospace work, which more directly utilized her education in computer programming and degree in mathematics. In the spring of 1984, Pat began working for the Bendix Field Engineering Corporation (now Honeywell) at the Goddard Space Flight Center. She worked in the command management facility, providing support to two flight projects: the Solar Maximum Mission and the Solar Dynamics Explorer. She later transferred to the Hubble mission operations program, supporting various engineering aspects of Hubble operations ever since. Before Hubble was launched in 1990, Pat worked in the Mission Planning Office, writing documentation and procedures to establish interfaces between Hubble operations at Goddard with those at the Space Telescope Science Institute. She also evaluated software output products to resolve errors, and supported ground-system tests between Goddard and Lockheed in Sunnyvale, California, where the spacecraft was built. “One of my greatest thrills was to see Hubble prior to launch,” she says. “It was impressively large, marvelously complex, and strikingly beautiful.” By the first Hubble servicing mission, Pat was managing the project database office—building parallel-command and telemetry databases to support operations and servicing mission development. For the next nine years, she managed a test team responsible for integrated testing of the ground system, deliveries of flight software, and servicing-mission operations and ground-system testing of the Hubble replacement hardware and science instruments. Pat is a talented seamstress. She has made drapes (for 20 by 20 foot windows!) for a home listed on the historical register in Washington, DC. Such attention to detail and the ability to oversee large projects have served her well in tackling her current Hubble assignment—leading the Systems Management Operations Team, which coordinates engineering acceptance testing, oversees on-orbit activities performed by the spacecraft subsystem engineers, investigates anomalies, and supports operations with planning and preparations for the next servicing mission. “I consider myself very fortunate to have been given the opportunity to continually learn and grow on the Hubble project all these years, “ she says. 130 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Walyus Servicing Mission Operations Manager NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Keith Walyus joined the Hubble operations team in 1998. He has held various jobs on the project, starting as a systems engineer and then becoming the deputy flight operations manager in 2000. He has been the Servicing Mission Operations Manager since shortly after Servicing Mission 3B in 2002. Keith began his NASA career in 1985 as an Air Force 2nd Lieutenant working at the Johnson Space Center in Houston, before becoming a NASA employee in 1989. He moved to the Washington, DC area and became a Goddard Space Flight Center employee in 1993. For Keith, working in conjunction with the staff at Johnson Space Center on a servicing mission is a kind of a homecoming. In fact, some of the engineers and managers who are supporting the next Hubble servicing mission were fellow Air Force officers with Keith in Texas. Keith is a member of the Goddard’s Speakers Bureau and enjoys giving talks to various internal and external organizations. “What always impresses me is the deep and genuine interest everyone has in the status of Hubble,” he comments. “To me, it seems that Hubble has passed beyond being just a telescope and is now a cultural icon. It gives one a tremendous feeling of accomplishment to be able to show people pictures from Hubble, and to know that I’ve played a part in these discoveries.” Keith and his wife, Christine, have three daughters, ages three and under. He hopes that a successful servicing mission will allow the telescope to operate long enough for his girls to also be amazed by some of Hubble’s discoveries as they occur. In his spare time (which isn’t too often with three small children!) Keith enjoys biking, running, and martial arts. 131 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Bean Graduate Student University of Texas at Austin Jacob Bean is a fourth year doctoral candidate in astrophysics at the University of Texas in Austin. His dissertation research is focused on determining the atmospheric compositions of the lowest-mass stars—the so-called “red dwarfs.” Building on previous work in the field, Jacob developed the first technique to accurately determine the atmospheric compositions of these stars. He uses his newly developed technique to quantify the relationships between composition, luminosity, and the probability of planet formation in red dwarfs. In 2002, Jacob earned a B.S. in Physics from the Georgia Institute of Technology. After graduating, he chose to attend the University of Texas for graduate school and to work with the Hubble Astrometry Science Team. In addition to his dissertation research on red dwarfs, Jacob is involved in projects using Hubble’s Fine Guidance Sensors (FGSs) to make precise measurements of the distances to planetary nebulae and Cepheid variables, the absolute dimensions of extrasolar planetary systems, and the masses of red dwarfs. Jacob is responsible for reducing the Hubble data for these projects. He also coordinates the collection and analysis of supporting spectroscopic data obtained at ground-based telescopes. Jacob says he particularly enjoys working with the high-quality data from the FGSs, because Hubble was one of the reasons he chose a career in astronomy. “The stunning images of distant galaxies, gaseous nebulae, and star clusters that Hubble produced in the late 1990s came at a time when I was deciding what degree to pursue as an undergraduate. The popular articles that accompanied those images in the media left me wanting to know more details.” Outside of astronomy, Jacob enjoys competitive road cycling and long-distance swimming. He enjoys training with his wife, who shares similar interests. Together they also enjoy hiking, traveling, cooking, and are trying to raise an unruly cat named Spock. 132 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Wechsler Hubble Fellow University of Chicago Risa Wechsler is finishing her third year as a Hubble Fellow at the University of Chicago, where she works at the Kavli Institute for Cosmological Physics. She is a theoretical cosmologist, who primarily studies the formation of large-scale structure and galaxies in the universe. Risa was an undergraduate in physics at MIT. She received her Ph.D. in Physics in 2001 from the University of California at Santa Cruz, where her work focused on galaxy clustering and the assembly history of the dark matter concentrations that host galaxies. Before starting her Hubble Fellowship, she was a postdoctoral fellow for two years at the University of Michigan. As a Hubble Fellow, Risa’s research has focused on theoretical interpretations of data from the Hubble Space Telescope and groundbased surveys relating to the evolution of concentrations of dark matter and the galaxies that form within these concentrations. Particularly important are new observations from Hubble on the clustering properties of distant galaxies and the evolution of the size, color, and brightness of galaxies. She hopes to discover how these properties depend on the nature of the dark matter, the cosmological parameters, and the heating and cooling of the interstellar gas available to form new stars. By varying those parameters in her models, she can form different hypothetical universes to compare with the observations. Through such comparisons, she tests and improves the basic assumptions of the models, leading to an improved understanding of galaxy formation and the connection between light and the nonluminous mass in the universe. Risa enjoys sharing the excitement of cosmology and astronomy with the public. In 2005, she gave the Compton Lectures, a series of public lectures at the University of Chicago extending over an academic quarter. Her series was entitled “The Story of Galaxy Formation in our Universe.” This “story” has become much easier to tell with the beautiful and inspiring images taken by Hubble in the past several years. In fall 2006, Risa became an Assistant Professor of Physics at Stanford University and at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, where she is associated with the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology. Although she enjoyed Chicago immensely, she has been looking forward to living in San Francisco and to getting back to her native West Coast and some topographical contrast. When she’s not working, she enjoys traveling, hiking, dancing, yoga, and eating great food. 133 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review — Supporting Hubble Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Coming Attractions Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Planets and Disks Around Nearby Stars Since 1995, more than 200 planets have been discovered orbiting around nearby stars. The field has grown from a few intrepid astronomers looking for the minute changes in the velocity of stars due to the perturbations of orbiting planets, to hundreds of astronomers finding planets using radically different techniques. Kailash Sahu’s article earlier in this volume describes how Hubble has been used to detect planets when they pass in front of the stars about which they are orbiting. If the star is bright enough, this transit technique can be used to constrain the size of the planet and probe its atmosphere. Hubble has successfully done this for a planet orbiting around the star HD 209458, and over the coming year will be carrying out similar types of observations on several recently discovered transiting planets. Particularly interesting is an upcoming attempt to detect clouds and water using infrared observations. Another technique for finding or confirming the existence of planets is to search for tiny changes in the positions of stars in response to the orbiting planets. To date, this “reflex motion” has been detected in just a few planetary systems. Ongoing observations with Hubble’s Fine Guidance Sensors are aimed at detecting this motion in another half-dozen planetary systems. By combining the Hubble positional data with the velocity data from ground-based telescopes, astronomers expect to make much more accurate estimates of the mass of the orbiting planets, and perhaps find additional planets in those planetary systems. A related burgeoning field is the study of dust disks around nearby stars. Such disks now appear to be common around young stars, and are likely the ancestors of planetary systems. More and more disks are being discovered, especially because of observations by the Spitzer infrared observatory, which can detect their infrared thermal signature. Observations by Hubble over next few years will help to reveal the detailed structure of such disks, characterizing how their appearance changes around stars of differing ages, and perhaps revealing how they are sculpted by the gravitational influence of unseen planets. Page 134–135: One of the universe’s most stately and photogenic galaxies is the Sombrero galaxy, Messier 104 (M104). The galaxy’s hallmark is a brilliant white, bulbous core encircled by the thick dust lanes which comprise its spiral structure. Left: The parent star (highlighted with arrow) of the transiting planet mentioned in the opening paragraph on this page is called HD 209458. It lies 150 light-years from Earth, and can be found with binoculars in the constellation of Pegasus. 137 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Nearby Clusters of Galaxies Galaxies are not uniformly distributed in space. Instead, they tend to be found in groups and clusters, drawn together by their mutual gravitational attraction. Interestingly, the properties of galaxies appear to be strongly dependent on their environment. Galaxies in dense clusters tend to have older stars and are nearly devoid of the gas necessary to fuel star formation. Even today, galaxies that are surrounded by fewer neighbors tend to have more gas and are generally forming new stars. The physical mechanisms driving these differences are only partially understood. Hubble can help uncover the answers in a variety of ways. For example, the high resolution afforded by Hubble observations allows astronomers to find thousands of individual star clusters within the galaxies, and differentiate them from foreground stars in our own galaxy. The colors of these star clusters provide information on their ages and chemical abundances. By comparing the color distribution in different galaxies, astronomers hope to piece together a better history of star formation in the galaxies that inhabit nearby groups. Hubble observations also provide detailed information on the central regions of galaxies, where stars often orbit under the influence of a supermassive black hole. By studying large collections of galaxies, astronomers hope to better understand the connection between the black holes and the surrounding stellar populations. Beyond the central regions, detailed measurements of galaxy shapes and color variations can help to provide information on how the galaxies have merged and + interacted over time. Hubble observations will also likely reveal hitherto unknown dwarf galaxies, and help to constrain how galaxy properties vary as a function of mass. Scientific papers from the Hubble survey of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies are now appearing in the literature, and more are expected from the major surveys of the nearby Fornax and Coma clusters that are underway. + = This is a new composite image of galaxy cluster MS0735.6+7421, located about 2.6 billion light-years away in the constellation Camelopardalis. The three views of the region were taken with NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory (top image on left), Hubble (second one down) and the National Radio Astronomy Observatory Very Large Array (third one down). 139 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Stellar Populations in Nearby Galaxies For galaxies closer to the Milky Way than those in the nearest clusters, Hubble observations can reveal individual stars. While the inner regions of most nearby galaxies are too crowded for a careful census, Hubble measurements of the positions, colors, and brightness of stars in the outskirts of galaxies provides a valuable probe of the “fossil record” of galaxy formation. Astronomers assemble the measurements of collections of stars into diagrams of color versus brightness, which can be compared to theoretical models to deduce the distribution of ages and chemical compositions of the stellar population. Over the past several years, observations have revealed that the outskirts of galaxies contain not only ancient stars left over from the initial phases of galaxy formation, but also stars more recently acquired from the destruction of dwarf galaxies by the tidal forces experienced when their orbits take them close to much larger galaxies. Hubble observations will help determine when, and how often, such encounters occurred. Swirls of gas and dust reside in this ethereal-looking region of star formation imaged by Hubble. This majestic view of LH 95, located in the Large Magellanic Cloud, reveals a region where low-mass, infant stars and their much more massive stellar neighbors reside. The image was taken in March 2006 with Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys. 141 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Jupiter and Saturn in the Heliophysical Year One of the most beautiful phenomena in the night sky is the aurora borealis, or northern lights. These spectacular light shows occur when charged particles in the solar wind collide with atoms in Earth’s upper atmosphere. The aurora is shaped by Earth’s magnetic field, which can cause the auroral glow to take the form of curtains, arcs, rings, or rays. Jupiter’s Northern Aurora Like Earth, Jupiter and Saturn both have aurorae. An extensive Hubble observing campaign in 2007 is targeted at determining the physical relationship of the various auroral processes at Jupiter and Saturn with conditions in the solar wind at each planet. The year 2007 has been designated the International Heliophysical Year, and represents a unique period of especially concentrated measurements of Jupiter’s Southern Aurora space physics phenomena throughout the Solar System. The Hubble observations will be done in concert with measurements of the plasma density of the solar wind from the New Horizons spacecraft, now on its way to Pluto, and from the Cassini spacecraft, now in orbit around Saturn. The observations will allow astronomers to correlate the auroral behavior with the geometry of the local magnetic field and properties of the solar wind. For Jupiter, the observations will allow detailed study of the auroral “footprint” left by a river of electric current (of about 1 million amperes) that flows between the planet and its volcanic moon Io. The dancing auroras on Saturn do not behave as scientists previously predicted. New research by a team of astronomers has overturned theories about how Saturn’s magnetic field acts and how the planet’s auroras are generated. The phenomenon is fundamentally different from that observed on Earth or Jupiter. 143 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Further Reading Barger, A., “The Midlife Crisis of the Cosmos,” Scientific American, January 2005. Begelman, M. C. “Evidence for Black Holes,” Science, vol. 300, 1898–1903, 20 June 2003. DeYoung, D. S., The Physics of Extragalactic Radio Sources, University of Chicago Press, ISBN 0226144151, 2002. Disney, M., “A New Look at Quasars,” Scientific American, June 1998. Harris, D. E., and H. Krawczynski, “X-ray Emission from Extragalactic Jets,” Annual Reviews of Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol. 44, 463–509, 2007. Harris, D. E., et al., “The Outburst of HST-1 in the M87 Jet,” Astrophysical Journal, 640, 211, 2006. Hasinger, G., and R. Gilli, “The Cosmic Reality Check,” Scientific American, March 2002. Jester, S., et al., “New Chandra Observations of the Jet in 3C 273: I. Softer X-ray than Radio Spectra and the X-ray Emission Mechanism,” Astrophysical Journal, Vol. 648, pages 900-909, September 2006. Johnson, G., Miss Leavitt’s Stars: The Untold Story of the Woman Who Discovered How to Measure the Universe, W. W. Norton, New York, 162, 2005. Meier, D. L., S. Koide, and Y. Uchida, “Magnetohydrodynamic Production of Relativistic Jets,” Science, vol. 291, 84–92, January 2001. Perlman, E. S., and A. S. Wilson, “The X-ray Emission from the M87 Jet: Diagnostics and Physical Interpretation,” Astrophysical Journal, 627, 140, 2005. Readings on Spectroscopic Selection: Bolton et al. 2004, Astronomical Journal, 127, 1860; Warren et al. 1996, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 278, 139. Readings on SLACS Survey: Bolton et al. 2006, Astrophysical Journal, 638, 703; Treu et al. 2006, Astrophysical Journal, 640, 662; Koopmans et al. 2006, Astrophysical Journal, 649, 599. “Sky & Telescope,” http://skytonight.com/news/3307111.html Turner, E. L., “Gravitational Lenses,” Scientific American, 54, July 1988. Wambsganss, J., “Gravity’s kaleidoscope,” Scientific American, no. 5, 52–59, http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2001SciAm.285e..52W, 2001. Weaver, K., “The Galactic Odd Couple,” Scientific American, July 2003. Uchiyama, Y., et al., “Shedding New Light on the 3C 273 Jet with the Spitzer Space Telescope,” Astrophysical Journal, 648, 910, 2006. York et al., “Sloan Survey,” Astronomical Journal, 120, 1579, 2000. 144 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review Acknowledgments Credit for the success of the Hubble Space Telescope rightly belongs to an entire universe of people and organizations. First and foremost are the citizens of the United States and Europe, who have steadfastly supported Hubble over the years with their tax dollars and their enthusiasm. As a result, thousands of astronomers from around the world have successfully used Hubble to probe the deepest mysteries of the universe and have shared their discoveries through both professional publications and public outreach. Educators and students worldwide have recognized in Hubble an important source of knowledge, excitement, and motivation about science. A small cadre of astronauts from NASA and ESA have taken significant personal risk to service Hubble, maintaining and upgrading the spacecraft to keep it at the forefront of astronomical research. The Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters and the HST Program Office at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center have led the Hubble program over the years, with major contributions to the observatory—both hardware and people—also provided by the ESA. Hubble’s highly successful science program has been organized and guided by the Space Telescope Science Institute, operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy under contract to NASA. Last, but not least, many dedicated NASA employees and dozens of first-class contractor organizations throughout the global aerospace industry have designed, built, and successfully operated Hubble and its scientific instruments over a period spanning decades. All these people and organizations should take pride in the scientific achievements described in this publication. For additional information, contact: Susan Hendrix NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center Office of Public Affairs Greenbelt, MD 20771 301-286-7745 Space Telescope Science Institute 3700 San Martin Drive Baltimore, MD 21218-2410 410-338-4444 (general info) 410-338-4707 (technical info) http://hubblesite.org/ http://hubble.nasa.gov/ The team at Space Telescope Science Institute for this publication included Robert Brown (Editor), Henry Ferguson, Ann Feild, Christian Lallo, Mario Livio, Sharon Toolan, and Ray Villard. The team at Goddard Space Flight Center included Kevin Hartnett (Lead), James Jeletic, David Leckrone, Michael Marosy, Steven Stuart, Edward Henderson, Chris Gunn, Pat Izzo, Elaine Firestone, Carol Ladd, and Mindy Deyarmin. In reference lists, please cite this document as Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review, Robert Brown, ed. (Baltimore: STScI for NASA Goddard Space Flight Center). 145 Hubble 2006: Science Year in Review