Supernova Discoveries 2010-2011: Statistics and Trends
Avishay Gal-Yam, Paolo Mazzali, Ilan Manulis, David Bishop

TL;DR
This paper analyzes supernova discoveries from 2010-2011, highlighting the rise of wide-field surveys, their contribution to discoveries, and the trends in spectroscopic follow-up and discovery properties.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive statistical overview of supernova discoveries during 2010-2011, emphasizing the impact of modern wide-field surveys and community contributions.
Findings
Wide-field surveys like CRTS and PTF dominate discoveries.
Spectroscopic follow-up is high for brighter, amateur discoveries.
Discoveries span a range of magnitudes and redshifts, with new faint and nearby events.
Abstract
We have inspected all supernova discoveries reported during 2010 and 2011 (538 and 926 events, respectively). We examine the statistics of all discovered objects, as well as those of the subset of spectroscopically-confirmed events. In these two years we see the rise of wide-field non-targeted supernova surveys to prominence, with the largest numbers of events reported by the CRTS and PTF surveys (572 and 393 events in total respectively, contributing together 74% of all reported discoveries in 2011), followed by the integrated contribution of numerous amateurs (184 events). Among spectroscopically-confirmed events the PTF (393 events) leads, followed by CRTS (170 events), and amateur discoveries (144 events). Traditional galaxy-targeted surveys, such as LOSS and CHASE, maintain a strong contribution (86 and 61 events, respectively) with high spectroscopic completeness (~90% per cent).…
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