IAUC draft ver.6

From: Mamoru Doi (doi@ioa.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
Date: Tue Mar 25 2003 - 14:32:18 PST

  • Next message: Andy Howell: "Re: IAUC draft ver.6"

    Dear Andy and colleagues,

    Sorry for my slow response. I have been busy for a biannual
    assembly of the astronomical society of Japan (Mar.23-26),
    since I am in charge of the program.

    Let me write down responses to Andy's comments/questions first.

    >-SuF02-026 was not on the circular. Why is that? Spectra were
    >indeterminate,
    >but it has a light curve that looks like a SN. The LC says z=1.46 -- where
    >did that come from? I have not put it back on the list, but Mamoru may
    >want to.
    I put this into not a possible AGN category.
    We observed this object twice. There are two comments on this according to
    my note.
     The photometric redshift is estimated to be z=0.80.
    11/6 Keck weak SN signal
    11/9 VLT AGN? 1.46[OII]
    Chris, do you think we should put this to a posible SNe?

    >-Update on SuF-065: Peter says Gerson's fit is only good because it can
    >choose the date of max. His data has an additional constraining point.
    >Plus he has ACS data. However, I believe there is something wrong with the
    >photometry, because the spectrum looks like a Ia or Ib/c to both of us.
    >II doesn't fit at any z. Chris says it is possible that the redshift is
    >from the big nearby galaxy. In the face of all of this uncertainty,
    >it remains a "SN".
    The last ACS photometry is crucial. Other results can be interpreted
    as a Ia with large stretch factor.

    >-I still haven't heard back on the Keck spectra for 61, 21, 77, so I am
    >going to pretend we don't have them and move forward.
    We won't include these unless we can get new information.

    >-The "light curves" of the candidates in the second category are not great.
    >Since there could be host galaxy light, and I don't believe the limits,
    >You can see them on a plot that Naoki gave me here:
    >http://panisse.lbl.gov/collab/observing/schedule2002/2002B/lightcurves/fewpo
    >ints.ps
    >I have ordered these SNe in what I believe to be the rough order of
    >believability that they are SNe (almost every one is a gray area). I left
    >a break where I believe we should cut the list. This would mean
    >throwing out:
    >61, 83, 21, 34, 81, 51, 05, 59
    >I don't think we could defend these to Dan Green. I don't even know if
    >we could defend some of the ones higher up on the list.
    O.K. These are the ones which don't have enough epochs for follow up
    (< 4). If spectral information is poor, we should remove these 8.

    I attached the revised version, though this version still includes
    comments in the table.

    Regards,

    -Mamoru

    Ver.6
    -------------------------------------------------------------

    M. Doi, Univ. of Tokyo, on behalf of the Supernova Cosmology
    Project(cf. IAUC 7971, plus V. Fadeyev, B. Lee, V. Stanishev,
    and R. Vogel) and the Subaru high-redshift supernova search
    group (N. Yasuda, N. Kashikawa, K. Motohara, T. Morokuma,
    K.Sekiguchi, G. Kosugi, H. Furusawa, Y. Komiyama, T. Takata,
    M. Ouchi, Y. Ohyama, and Subaru Observatory SXDS Project members),
    reports the discovery of 13 spectroscopically confirmed supernovae
    and 9 probable supernovae found with Subaru telescope + Suprime-Cam
    in SDSS i' band. Reference images were taken on Sep. 30 and Oct.1,
    2002. The limiting magnitude of reference images was about 26.6mag
    (S/N=5 for 2arcsec aperture). All supernovae listed below were
    discovered on search images from Nov. 3.3 (UT). The magnitudes
    of the SNe after subtraction from reference images are given in
    the table below (photometric accuracy 0.1-0.2mag).

    The supernova spectra were obtained with GMOS on Gemini-N on
    Nov. 6, 8, and 9; with ESI on KeckII on Nov. 6, 7, 9,
    and 10; with FORS2 on Yepun (VLT-UT4) on Nov. 7 - 11; and
    with FOCAS on Subaru on Nov. 12. Redshifts were obtained for 13
    SNe using either the host galaxy spectrum (denoted with *)
    or with template spectrum fitting of a SN. SuF02-060 has
    as spectrum consistent with a Type Ia SN, and it is in
    an elliptical host galaxy.

    SCPname R.A. (J2000) Decl. i' z type offset Comments
    SuF02-060 02:17:34.51 -04:53:46.6 24.5 1.063* Ia 0.0" LC ok. 7
    points. s=0.80. Spectrum plausible, not convincing. Peter says E galaxy
    -> Ia. Grism spectra exist.
    SuF02-017 02:16:45.71 -05:09:51.2 25.0 1.03 Ia no host Feature
    could be Si 4000 if smoothed, but maybe too broad. LC poor, but declining.
     s=0.65.
    SuF02-025 02:16:23.93 -04:49:29.4 24.5 0.606* Ia 0.2" W Si.
    Confirmed Ia. Excellent LC. s=0.83, including rise.
    SuF02-001 02:17:00.05 -04:58:19.6 23.4 0.57 Ia 0.5" W aka
    SuF02-027. Certainly Ia. LC 7 points. Several sigma off, but reasonable s=0.83
    SuF02-065 02:17:34.53 -05:00:15.4 25.2 1.181* SN 1.3" SSE Peter
    says LC is like Type II. SN minuit says Ia could fit s=1.07. Big errors,
    residuals.
    SuF02-071 02:17:08.63 -05:02:06.4 23.8 0.928* SN 1.4" E At that
    redshift, Ia features do not seem to match. LC good fit, 7pts, falling,
    s=0.86.
    SuF02-037 02:17:43.30 -04:30:56.7 24.6 0.926* SN 0.4" E One bump
    in the spectrum. Ok LC, rises, falls. 4 points, s=0.77
    SuF02-000 02:17:42.54 -05:06:34.0 24.8 0.92* SN 0.5" NE Almost
    all galaxy light in spectrum, but LC good -- rises, falls. s=0.73
    SuF02-002 02:17:12.24 -04:55:08.7 24.4 0.823* SN 0.3" NW Chris
    (prelim) says: Wiggles don't seem to match a Ia at this redshift. Now
    says: Possible SN. Good LC fit, s=0.75
    SuF02-055 02:18:53.20 -04:32:59.2 23.7 0.66: SN 0.6" N One bump
    in the spectrum. Well fit LC, but only 4 points. s=1.08
    SuF02-082 02:18:40.73 -05:03:44.3 25.3 0.623* SN 1.1" NNW
    Essentially a featureless spectrum. LC not great, but rises, falls, 7
    points, s=1.01 +/- 0.07
    SuF02-077 02:18:35.15 -04:26:38.9 25.1 0.59: SN 0.6" NW I don't
    have the spectrum. LC 4 points, rising, falling, s=0.73
    SuF02-019 02:17:38.08 -05:08:46.8 24.5 0.505* SN 0.3" NW
    Featureless, mainly galaxy light. LC poor, but declining.

    We also report 9 probable SNe. Follow-up photometry was
    carried out with Suprime-Cam, and we confirmed SN signals
    on at least 3 epochs among 7 (Nov.3,6,10,28,30,Dec.7,8)
    for all objects below. They are all either hostless or
    offset from the host galaxy center, and have light curves
    consistent with SNe, but have not spectral confirmation.

    Chris: I don't think we can report a redshift for either of these
    candidatesin the IAU Circular.
    SuF02-012 02:18:51.59 -04:47:24.8 25.1 ? SN 0.2" N Many
    minima in z space. Grism spectra exist. LC poor, but declining @ z=1.3
    Lifan z=1.03
    SuF02-007 02:18:52.36 -05:01:13.2 24.8 1.18: SN no host Chris
    says z=1.54, but that would make it too bright. z uncertain -> type
    uncertain. LC ok, s=0.99 @ z=1.18

    SCPname R.A. (J2000) Decl. i' host info.
    SuF02-028 02:16:56.37 -05:00:57.4 24.9 0.347:* SN 1.5" SE LC rises,
    falls. Could be a SN. Chris: No evidence for a SN. Another weird one.
    The spectrum falls off after H-alpha.
    SuF02-004 02:18:09.01 -04:54:17.9 25.1 0.6" SE LC slow
    decline, strange last point -- could be a SN.
    SuF02-086 02:17:16.18 -05:06:02.7 26.2 no host LC 3
    points + limits. Limits imply falling. Indeterminate. Could be a SN.
    Lifan z=0.89??? any
    SuF02-076 02:16:26.37 -05:04:32.5 26.1 no host LC 5
    points, 3 clustered together, two lower. Probably declining.
    SuF02-056 02:20:00.03 -04:44:20.2 24.3 0.5" SE LC 3
    points, 1 limit. Falling.
    SuF02-057 02:20:13.92 -05:07:36.0 25.6 no host LC Flat.
    SuF02-J01 02:17:45.97 -04:36:46.2 25.2 0.2" W LC Flat.

    ----------------------------------------------------------------
    We probably do not include the following 8.
    ----------------------------------------------------------------
    SuF02-061 02:17:22.73 -05:16:56.1 24.7 1.08: ? 0.0" I  don't
    have the spectrum. 3 points on LC falling. Could be a SN. Could  be AGN
    -- zero offset.
    SuF02-083 02:18:06.22 -05:00:38.1 26.0 1.272* ? 0.4" S Flat
    spectrum. LC not monotonic, 3 points. Limits imply falling.
    SuF02-021 02:18:10.56 -04:40:20.6 24.6 0.69 ? 2.9" SSW Two LC
    points. Drops like a rock. I don't have the spectrum, but Saul's notes
    don't mention a match to a Ia.
    SuF02-034 02:18:31.21 -05:01:24.4 25.6 0.2" N LC
    strange. Very slow rise.
    SuF02-081 02:20:07.55 -05:08:27.2 25.1 1.478* ? 0.0" Spectrum
    misses big feature for Ia if z is correct. LC terrible at  z=1.48, 3
    points. Could be AGN -- zero offset.
    SuF02-051 02:17:27.48 -04:40:45.2 25.4 no host LC 3
    points, 1 limit. Doesn't seem to fit a light curve.
    SuF02-005 02:18:35.70 -04:31:11.0 24.6 0.863* ? 0.3" NE No LC.
    No good SN fit. Chris: Weird. Very broad bump at 8500 Angstroms.
    SuF02-059 02:20:28.06 -04:58:50.3 25.7 0.269* ? 0.2" E Spectrum
    pretty flat. How can it be at I=25.7 and z=0.269? LC terrible, 3 points,
    s=0.55, and huge errors. Is z wrong?

    Mamoru Doi
    Institute of Astronomy
    School of Science
    University of Tokyo
    voice +81-422-34-5084
    fax. +81-422-34-5041
    doi@ioa.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp



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