DRAFT
2023-11-27 08:46:05
Type: Object/s-Discovery/Classification
ZTF superluminous supernova candidates
Authors: Ragnhild Lunnan (OKC), Daniel A. Perley, Jacob Wise (LJMU), Anamaria Gkini, Sean Brennan, Priscila Pessi, Jesper Sollerman (OKC), Steve Schulze (CIERA/Northwestern), Ting-Wan Chen (NCUIA), Lin Yan (Caltech), Tuomas Kangas (Turku), Avishay Gal-Yam (WIS)
Source Group: ZTF
Abstract:
We report 6 ZTF superluminous supernova candidates selected by our software filter and subsequent vetting. In this sample, a typical rise time is about 50 days and a typical peak r-band magnitude is 19-20 mag. We encourage spectroscopic classifications.

The Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF; Bellm et al. 2019; Graham et al. 2019) Superluminous Supernova Science Program (Lunnan et al. 2020; Yan et al. 2020; Chen et al. 2023a,b) reports 6 candidate SLSNe, following the methodology outlined by Perley et al. (in prep.)  We selected transients that have a long rise time (>20 days) and a faint host galaxy.

We summarise properties of the candidates in the Related Objects Table. These include coordinates, current magnitudes, approximate rise times, photometric redshifts of potential host galaxies (taken from the SDSS DR14) and special remarks.

We will distribute alerts on such SLSN candidates via AstroNotes periodically; spectroscopic classifications and additional follow-up observations of these transients are encouraged.

This report is based on observations obtained with the Samuel Oschin Telescope 48-inch and the 60-inch Telescope at the Palomar Observatory as part of the Zwicky Transient Facility project. ZTF is supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. AST-2034437 and a collaboration including Caltech, IPAC, the Oskar Klein Center at Stockholm University, the University of Maryland, University of California, Berkeley , the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee, University of Warwick, Ruhr University, Cornell University, Northwestern University and Drexel University. Operations are conducted by COO, IPAC, and UW.

Show current TNS values
Catalog Name Reported RA Reported DEC Reported Obj-Type Reported Redshift Host Name Host Redshift Remarks TNS RA TNS DEC TNS Obj-Type TNS Redshift
TNS 2023wwx [ZTF23abjarpv] 22:43:08.716 -23:47:30.88 Rising for 45 days, currently r~19.1. Hostless in Pan-STARRS. 22:43:08.735 -23:47:30.87 SLSN-I 0.29
TNS 2023yeq [ZTF23abjweqv] 23:53:33.591 +41:41:02.19 Rising for 60 days, currently r~19.9. No photo-z available but appears offset from faint, extended source in Pan-STARRS. 23:53:33.585 +41:41:02.25
TNS 2023yho [ZTF23abedrka] 02:52:01.990 +06:08:19.52 80-day light curve, initial rise over 25 days then flattening out. Currently r~20.1 mag. Faint host has SDSS photo-z of 0.299 ± 0.142. 02:52:01.988 +06:08:19.58
TNS 2023yhp [ZTF23abasfmt] 04:22:09.620 -15:10:31.84 100-day light curve in ZTF and ATLAS, now on the decline, currently r~19.3 mag. Hostless in PS1 and Legacy Survey. 04:22:09.600 -15:10:31.85
TNS 2023tzd [ZTF23abiflhi] 20:15:35.574 -07:19:52.33 Light curve has been rising for nearly 70 days, currently r~18.9. In the center of a r=19.5 mag galaxy with a PS1-STRM photo-z of 0.22. 20:15:35.575 -07:19:52.22
TNS 2023wzq [ZTF23abieyhx] 16:53:38.860 +11:23:49.57 70-day light curve, now on the decline. Currently r~20.0 mag. Hostless in PS1 and Legacy Survey. 16:53:38.860 +11:23:49.57

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