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The Fall 2004 SDSS Supernova Survey

Authors :
Mike Harvanek
S. J. Kleinman
Christopher Stoughton
Jared Kaplan
Andrew C. Becker
Josh Frieman
Richard Kessler
Craig J. Hogan
D. Long
Hubert Lampeitl
D. Lamenti
J. Krzesinski
R. J. McMillan
Douglas L. Tucker
Roger W. Romani
John S. Hendry
John Marriner
Jon A. Holtzman
F. DeJongh
Masao Sako
S. A. Snedden
Gajus Miknaitis
J. Estrada
Jennifer K. Adelman-McCarthy
Jack Dembicky
Robert C. Nichol
Howard Brewington
John C. Barentine
S. M. Kahn
Donald G. York
Roger Blandford
David Johnston
Ben Dilday
Paul Newman
Suzanne L. Hawley
Atsuko Nitta
Ryan Scranton
Bill Ketzeback
Erin S. Sheldon
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2005.

Abstract

In preparation for the Supernova Survey of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) II, a proposed 3-year extension to the SDSS, we have conducted an early engineering and science run during the fall of 2004, which consisted of approximately 20 scheduled nights of repeated imaging of half of the southern equatorial stripe. Transient supernova-like events were detected in near real-time and photometric measurements were made in the five SDSS filter bandpasses with a cadence of {approx} 2 days. Candidate type Ia supernovae (SNe) were pre-selected based on their colors, light curve shape, and the properties of the host galaxy. Follow-up spectroscopic observations were performed with the Astrophysical Research Consortium 3.5m telescope and the 9.2m Hobby-Eberly Telescope to confirm their types and measure the redshifts. The 2004 campaign resulted in 22 spectroscopically confirmed SNe, which includes 16 type Ia, 5 type II, and 1 type Ib/c. These SN Ia will help fill in the sparsely sampled redshift interval of z = 0.05-0.35, the so-called ''redshift desert'', in the Hubble diagram. Detailed investigation of the spectral properties of these moderate-redshift SNe Ia will also provide a bridge between local SNe and high-redshift objects, and will help us understand the systematics for futuremore » cosmological applications that require high photometric precision. Finally, the large survey volume also provides the opportunity to select unusual supernovae for spectroscopic study that are poorly sampled in other surveys. We report on some of the early results from this program and discuss potential future applications.« less

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d0e60407acadcce08c09fd15ddd0f3fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2172/839883