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The Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey

Authors :
Sako, Masao
Bassett, Bruce
Becker, Andrew C.
Brown, Peter J.
Campbell, Heather
Cane, Rachel
Cinabro, David
D'Andrea, Chris B.
Dawson, Kyle S.
DeJongh, Fritz
Depoy, Darren L.
Dilday, Ben
Doi, Mamoru
Filippenko, Alexei V.
Fischer, John A.
Foley, Ryan J.
Frieman, Joshua A.
Galbany, Lluis
Garnavich, Peter M.
Goobar, Ariel
Gupta, Ravi R.
Hill, Gary J.
Hayden, Brian T.
Hlozek, Renee
Holtzman, Jon A.
Hopp, Ulrich
Jha, Saurabh W.
Kessler, Richard
Kollatschny, Wolfram
Leloudas, Giorgos
Marriner, John
Marshall, Jennifer L.
Miquel, Ramon
Morokuma, Tomoki
Mosher, Jennifer
Nichol, Robert C.
Nordin, Jakob
Olmstead, Matthew D.
Ostman, Linda
Prieto, Jose L.
Richmond, Michael
Romani, Roger W.
Sollerman, Jesper
Stritzinger, Max
Schneider, Donald P.
Smith, Mathew
Wheeler, J. Craig
Yasuda, Naoki
Zheng, Chen
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

This paper describes the data release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II) Supernova Survey conducted between 2005 and 2007. Light curves, spectra, classifications, and ancillary data are presented for 10,258 variable and transient sources discovered through repeat ugriz imaging of SDSS Stripe 82, a 300 deg2 area along the celestial equator. This data release is comprised of all transient sources brighter than r~22.5 mag with no history of variability prior to 2004. Dedicated spectroscopic observations were performed on a subset of 889 transients, as well as spectra for thousands of transient host galaxies using the SDSS-III BOSS spectrographs. Photometric classifications are provided for the candidates with good multi-color light curves that were not observed spectroscopically. From these observations, 4607 transients are either spectroscopically confirmed, or likely to be, supernovae, making this the largest sample of supernova candidates ever compiled. We present a new method for SN host-galaxy identification and derive host-galaxy properties including stellar masses, star-formation rates, and the average stellar population ages from our SDSS multi-band photometry. We derive SALT2 distance moduli for a total of 1443 SN Ia with spectroscopic redshifts as well as photometric redshifts for a further 677 purely-photometric SN Ia candidates. Using the spectroscopically confirmed subset of the three-year SDSS-II SN Ia sample and assuming a flat Lambda-CDM cosmology, we determine Omega_M = 0.315 +/- 0.093 (statistical error only) and detect a non-zero cosmological constant at 5.7 sigmas.<br />Comment: Submitted to ApJS. Full catalogs and datafiles are available here: http://sdssdp62.fnal.gov/sdsssn/DataRelease/index.html

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1401.3317
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/1538-3873/aab4e0