Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH)
Short Name:
HST.CLASH
Date:
22 Jul 2020 22:29:29
Publisher:
Space Telescope Science Institute Archive
Description:
By observing 25 massive galaxy clusters with HST's new panchromatic imaging capabilities (Wide-field Camera 3, WFC3, and the Advanced Camera for Surveys, ACS), CLASH will accomplish its four primary science goals:
- Map, with unprecedented accuracy, the distribution of dark matter in galaxy clusters using strong and
weak gravitational lensing;
- Detect Type Ia supernovae out to redshift z ~ 2, allowing us to test the constancy of dark energy's
repulsive force over time and look for any evolutionary effects in the supernovae themselves;
- Detect and characterize some of the most distant galaxies yet discovered at z > 7 (when the Universe
was younger than 800 million years old - or less than 6% of its current age);
- Study the internal structure and evolution of the galaxies in and behind these clusters.
The Hubble Ultra Deep Field 2009 (HUDF09) program observations were obtained as HST program 11563 (PI: Garth Illingworth) from August 2009 to February 2011 (Cycle 17). The program uses WFC3/IR as the prime instrument for 192 orbits to image the deep ACS fields that were obtained in the original HUDF (PI: Steven Beckwith) program and in the HUDF05 (PI: Massimo Stiavelli) program.
The data are organized into sets of images by HUDF09 pointing and by passband (WFC3/IR F105W, F125W & F160W). Each image is approximately 3k x 3k pixels in size and a scale of 0.06 arcsec/pixel. All three pointings reside in the GOODS/Chandra South field and each pointing includes a drizzled science image and a weight image.