Agnostic stacking of intergalactic doublet absorption: measuring the Ne VIII population
An HST/COS Survey of the Low-redshift Intergalactic Medium. I. Survey, Methodology, and Overall Results
Diagnosing galactic feedback with line broadening in the low-redshift Lya forest
Evidence for a Rotational Component in the Circumgalactic Medium of Nearby Galaxies
Identifying Circumgalactic Medium Absorption in QSO Spectra: A Bayesian Approach
Kinematics of the Magellanic Stream and Implications for Its Ionization
Mining circumgalactic baryons in the low-redshift universe
Nearby Galaxy Filaments and the Ly-alpha Forest: Confronting Simulations and the UV Background with Observations
On the connection between the metal-enriched intergalactic medium and galaxies: an O VI-galaxy cross-correlation study at z < 1
Outflow and Metallicity in the Broad-Line Region of Low-Redshift Active Galactic Nuclei
Probing Large Galaxy Halos at Z ~ 0 with Automated Lya-absorption Matching
Role of ionizing background and galactic feedback in the redshift space clustering of O VI absorbers in hydrodynamical simulations
The COS/UVES Absorption Survey of the Magellanic Stream. III. Ionization, Total Mass, and Inflow Rate onto the Milky Way
The effect of stellar and AGN feedback on the low-redshift Lyman a forest in the Sherwood simulation suite
The Metagalactic Ionizing Background: A Crisis in UV Photon Production or Incorrect Galaxy Escape Fractions?
The power spectrum of the Lyman-a Forest at z < 0.5
Tracing the Cosmic Metal Evolution in the Low-redshift Intergalactic Medium
Ultraviolet Emission-line Correlations in HST/COS Spectra of Active Galactic Nuclei: Single-epoch Black Hole Masses
Instrument
COS, COS/FUV
Temporal Coverage
2011-05-12T23:25:22Z/2011-09-29T11:09:55Z
Version
1.0
Mission Description
Launched in 1990, the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope remains the premier UV and visible light telescope in orbit. With well over 1.6 million observations from 10 different scientific instruments, the ESA Hubble Science Archive is a treasure trove of astronomical data to be exploited.
European Space Agency, Green et al., 2012, 'WARM AND HOT ISM IN AND NEAR THE MILKY WAY Part 2', 1.0, European Space Agency, https://doi.org/10.5270/esa-kciuvh3