J/MNRAS/471/4966    ASAS-SN bright supernova catalogue 2016     (Holoien+, 2017)

The ASAS-SN bright supernova catalogue - III. 2016. Holoien T.W.-S., Brown J.S., Stanek K.Z., Kochanek C.S., Shappee B.J., Prieto J.L., Dong S., Brimacombe J., Bishop D.W., Bose S., Beacom J.F., Bersier D., Chen P., Chomiuk L., Falco E., Godoy-Rivera D., Morrell N., Pojmanski G., Shields J.V., Strader J., Stritzinger M.D., Thompson T.A., Wozniak P.R., Bock G., Cacella P., Conseil E., Cruz I., Fernandez J.M., Kiyota S., Koff R.A., Krannich G., Marples P., Masi G., Monard L.A.G., Nicholls B., Nicolas J., Post R.S., Stone G., Wiethoff W.S. <Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 471, 4966-4981 (2017)> =2017MNRAS.471.4966H 2017MNRAS.471.4966H (SIMBAD/NED BibCode)
ADC_Keywords: Surveys ; Supernovae ; Photometry, SDSS ; Photometry, infrared ; Redshifts Keywords: catalogues - surveys - supernovae: general Abstract: This catalogue summarizes information for all supernovae discovered by the All-Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN) and all other bright (mpeak ≤17), spectroscopically confirmed supernovae discovered in 2016. We then gather the near-infrared through ultraviolet magnitudes of all host galaxies and the offsets of the supernovae from the centres of their hosts from public data bases. We illustrate the results using a sample that now totals 668 supernovae discovered since 2014 May 1, including the supernovae from our previous catalogues, with type distributions closely matching those of the ideal magnitude limited sample from Li et al. This is the third of a series of yearly papers on bright supernovae and their hosts from the ASAS-SN team. Description: Table 1 includes information for all SNe discovered by ASAS-SN between 2016 January 1 and 2016 December 31. As in Holoien et al. (2017, Cat.J/MNRAS/464/2672 and Cat. J/MNRAS/467/1098), all names, discovery dates and host names are taken from our discovery ATels, all of which are cited in Table 1. We also include the SN names designated by TNS, the official International Astronomical Union (IAU) mechanism for reporting new astronomical transients. In Table 2, we give information for all spectroscopically confirmed SNe with peak magnitudes of mpeak≤17 that were discovered by other professional and amateur SN searches between 2016 January 1 and 2016 December 31. For the host galaxies of both SN samples, we collected Galactic extinction estimates for the direction to the host and host magnitudes spanning from the near-ultraviolet (NUV) to the infrared (IR) wavelengths. We present these data in Tables 3 and 4 for ASAS-SN hosts and non-ASAS-SN hosts, respectively. File Summary: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- FileName Lrecl Records Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ReadMe 80 . This file table1.dat 181 151 ASAS-SN Supernovae table2.dat 155 97 Non-ASAS-SN Supernovae table3.dat 222 151 ASAS-SN Supernova Host Galaxies table4.dat 222 97 Non-ASAS-SN Supernova Host Galaxies refs.dat 47 227 References -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- See also: J/MNRAS/464/2672 : ASAS-SN bright supernova catalogue 2013-2014 (Holoien+ 2017) J/MNRAS/467/1098 : ASAS-SN bright supernova catalogue 2015 (Holoien+, 2017) Byte-by-byte Description of file: table1.dat -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bytes Format Units Label Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1- 11 A11 --- SNName Name of supernova 13- 19 A7 --- IAUName IAU name of supernova 21- 33 A13 --- DiscDate Discovery Date 35- 36 I2 h RAh Right Ascension (J2000) 38- 39 I2 min RAm Right Ascension (J2000) 41- 45 F5.2 s RAs Right Ascension (J2000) 47 A1 --- DE- Declination sign (J2000) 48- 49 I2 deg DEd Declination (J2000) 51- 52 I2 arcmin DEm Declination (J2000) 54- 57 F4.1 arcsec DEs Declination (J2000) 59- 65 F7.5 --- z Redshift of supernova 67- 70 F4.1 mag DiscMag Discovery V-band Magnitude (1) 72- 75 F4.1 mag PeakMag Peak V-band Magnitude (1) 77- 81 A5 arcsec Offset Offset from host nucleus (2) 83- 90 A8 --- Type Type of supernova 92- 94 I3 d DiscAge ? Age of supernova at discovery, relative to peak (3) 96-125 A30 --- HostName Host galaxy name 127-152 A26 --- DiscAtel Discovery ATel, in refs.dat file 154-181 A28 --- ClassAtel Classification ATel, in refs.dat file -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Note (1): All magnitudes are V -band magnitudes from ASAS-SN. Note (2): Offset indicates the offset of the SN in arcseconds from the coordinates of the host nucleus, taken from NED. Note (3): Discovery ages are given in days relative to peak. All ages are approximate and are only listed if a clear age was given in the classification telegram. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Byte-by-byte Description of file: table2.dat -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bytes Format Units Label Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1- 29 A29 --- SNName Name of supernova 31- 37 A7 --- IAUName IAU name of supernova (1) 39- 51 A13 --- DiscDate Discovery Date 53- 54 I2 h RAh Right Ascension (J2000) 56- 57 I2 min RAm Right Ascension (J2000) 59- 63 F5.2 s RAs Right Ascension (J2000) 65 A1 --- DE- Declination sign (J2000) 66- 67 I2 deg DEd Declination (J2000) 69- 70 I2 arcmin DEm Declination (J2000) 72- 75 F4.1 arcsec DEs Declination (J2000) 77- 83 F7.5 --- z Redshift of supernova 85- 88 F4.1 mag PeakMag Peak magnitude (2) 90- 95 A6 arcsec Offset Offset from host nucleus (3) 97-111 A15 --- Type Type of supernova 113-140 A28 --- HostName Host galaxy name 142-151 A10 --- Discover Who discovered the supernova (4) 153-155 A3 --- Recovered Recovered independently by ASAS-SN or not (5) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Note (1): IAU name is not provided if one was not given to the supernova. In some cases the IAU name may also be the primary supernova name. Note (2): All magnitudes are taken from D. W. Bishop's Bright Supernova website, as described in the text, and may be from different filters. Note (3): Offset indicates the offset of the SN in arcseconds from the coordinates of the host nucleus, taken from NED. Note (4): "Amateurs" indicates discovery by any number of non-professional astronomers, as described in the text. Note (5): Indicates whether the supernova was independently recovered in ASAS-SN data or not. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Byte-by-byte Description of file: table[34].dat -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bytes Format Units Label Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1- 30 A30 --- HostName Name of host galaxy 32- 38 F7.5 --- z Redshift of host galaxy 40- 69 A30 --- SNName Name of supernova 70- 84 A15 --- Type Type of supernova 86- 91 F6.2 arcsec Offset Offset of supernova from host nucleus 93- 97 F5.3 mag AV V-band extinction (1) 99-103 F5.2 mag NUVmag ? GALEX NUV magnitude (2) 105-108 F4.2 mag e_NUVmag ? GALEX NUV magnitude uncertainty (2) 110-114 F5.2 mag umag ? SDSS u magnitude (3) 116-119 F4.2 mag e_umag ? SDSS u magnitude uncertainty (3) 121-125 F5.2 mag gmag ? SDSS g magnitude (3) 127-130 F4.2 mag e_gmag ? SDSS g magnitude uncertainty (3) 132-136 F5.2 mag rmag ? SDSS r magnitude (3) 138-141 F4.2 mag e_rmag ? SDSS r magnitude uncertainty (3) 143-147 F5.2 mag imag ? SDSS i magnitude (3) 149-152 F4.2 mag e_imag ? SDSS i magnitude uncertainty (3) 154-158 F5.2 mag zmag ? SDSS z magnitude (3) 160-163 F4.2 mag e_zmag ? SDSS z magnitude uncertainty (3) 165 A1 --- l_Jmag Limit flag on Jmag 166-170 F5.2 mag Jmag 2MASS J magnitude (4) 172-175 F4.2 mag e_Jmag ? 2MASS J magnitude uncertainty (4) 177 A1 --- l_Hmag Limit flag on Hmag 178-182 F5.2 mag Hmag ? 2MASS H magnitude (4) 184-187 F4.2 mag e_Hmag ? 2MASS H magnitude uncertainty (4) 189 A1 --- l_Ksmag Limit flag on Ksmag 190-194 F5.2 mag Ksmag 2MASS Ks magnitude (4) 196-199 F4.2 mag e_Ksmag ? 2MASS Ks magnitude uncertainty (4) 200 A1 --- n_Ksmag [*] Note on Ksmag (5) 202-206 F5.2 mag W1mag ? WISE W1 magnitude 208-211 F4.2 mag e_W1mag ? WISE W1 magnitude uncertainty 213-217 F5.2 mag W2mag ? WISE W2 magnitude 219-222 F4.2 mag e_W2mag ? WISE W2 magnitude uncertainty -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Note (1): Galactic extinction taken from Schlafly & Finkbeiner (2011ApJ...737..103S 2011ApJ...737..103S). Note (2): No magnitude is listed for those galaxies not detected in GALEX survey data. Note (3): No magnitude is listed for those galaxies not detected in SDSS data or those located outside of the SDSS footprint. Note (4): For those galaxies not detected in 2MASS data, we assume an upper limit of the faintest galaxy detected in each band from our sample. Note (5): * for Ks-band magnitudes estimated from the WISE W1-band data, as described in the text. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Byte-by-byte Description of file: refs.dat -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Bytes Format Units Label Explanations -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1- 19 A19 --- BibCode BibCode 21- 47 A27 --- Ref Reference code -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- History: From electronic version of the journal References: Holoien et al., Paper I 2017MNRAS.464.2672H 2017MNRAS.464.2672H, Cat. J/MNRAS/464/2672 Holoien et al., Paper II 2017MNRAS.467.1098H 2017MNRAS.467.1098H, Cat. J/MNRAS/467/1098
(End) Patricia Vannier [CDS] 17-Jun-2020
The document above follows the rules of the Standard Description for Astronomical Catalogues; from this documentation it is possible to generate f77 program to load files into arrays or line by line