Nearby Supernova Rates from the Lick Observatory Supernova Search. I. The Methods and Database
Jesse Leaman (1,2), Weidong Li (1), Ryan Chornock (1,3), Alexei V., Filippenko (1) ((1) UC Berkeley (2) NASA/Ames (3) CfA, Harvard)

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive measurement of supernova rates in the local universe using the LOSS survey, employing modern CCD imaging and image subtraction, and establishes a foundation for future rate analyses.
Contribution
It introduces a new methodology for calculating supernova rates from a large, homogeneous CCD-based dataset and details the construction of the sample and control-time calculations.
Findings
Largest and most homogeneous nearby SN sample assembled
First local SN rate analysis based on CCD imaging and image subtraction
Strong correlation between SN rates and galaxy sizes
Abstract
This is the first paper of a series in which we present new measurements of the observed rates of supernovae (SNe) in the local Universe, determined from the Lick Observatory Supernova Search (LOSS). We have obtained 2.3 million observations of 14,882 sample galaxies over an interval of 11 years (March 1998 through Dec. 2008). We considered 1036 SNe detected in our sample and used an optimal subsample of 726 SNe (274 SNe~Ia, 116 SNe~Ibc, 324 SNe~II) to determine our SN rates. This is the largest and most homogeneous set of nearby SNe ever assembled for this purpose, and ours is the first local SN rate analysis based on CCD imaging and modern image-subtraction techniques. In this paper, we lay the foundation of the study. We derive the recipe for the control-time calculation for SNe with a known luminosity function, and provide details on the construction of the galaxy and SN samples…
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