The host galaxies of core-collapse supernovae and gamma ray bursts
K. M. Svensson, A. J. Levan, N. R. Tanvir, A. S. Fruchter, L. -G., Strolger

TL;DR
This study compares the environments of gamma-ray bursts and core-collapse supernovae, revealing that GRBs occur in smaller, less massive galaxies with intense star formation, and are highly concentrated on their host light.
Contribution
It provides an enhanced spectral and sample analysis of GRB and supernova host galaxies, offering new insights into their environmental differences and localizations.
Findings
GRBs occur in low-mass, high star formation rate galaxies.
CCSN are frequently found in massive spiral galaxies.
GRBs are highly concentrated on their host light regions.
Abstract
We present a comparative study of the galactic and small scale environments of gamma-ray bursts (GRB) and core collapse supernovae (CCSN). We use a sample of 34 GRB hosts at z<1.2, and a comparison sample of 58 supernova hosts located within the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey footprint. We fit template spectra to the available photometric data, which span the range 0.45-24 micron, and extract absolute magnitudes, stellar masses and star formation rates from the resulting fits. Our results broadly corroborate previous findings, but offer significant enhancements in spectral coverage and a factor 2-3 increase in sample size. Specifically, we find that CCSN occur frequently in massive spirals (spiral fraction ~50%). In contrast GRBs occur in small, relatively low mass galaxies with high specific and surface star formation rates, and have a spiral fraction of only ~10%. A…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
