A Spectroscopic Study of Type Ibc Supernova Host Galaxies from Untargeted Surveys
Nathan E. Sanders (1), Alicia M. Soderberg (1), Emily M. Levesque (2),, Ryan J. Foley (1), Ryan Chornock (1), Dan Milisavljevic (1), Raffaella, Margutti (1), Edo Berger (1), Maria R. Drout (1), Ian Czekala (1), Jason A.

TL;DR
This study provides the largest spectroscopic analysis of Type Ibc supernova host galaxies from untargeted surveys, revealing insights into their metallicity and stellar populations, and highlighting biases in previous targeted search studies.
Contribution
It offers new, unbiased measurements of host galaxy properties for a large sample of SN Ibc, extending to higher redshifts and reducing selection bias from targeted surveys.
Findings
No significant metallicity difference between SNe Ib and Ic hosts.
SN Ic-BL hosts have significantly lower metallicity and younger stellar populations.
Untargeted surveys reduce bias in understanding SN Ibc progenitor environments.
Abstract
We present the largest spectroscopic study of the host environments of Type Ibc supernovae (SN Ibc) discovered exclusively by untargeted SN searches. Past studies of SN Ibc host environments have been biased towards high-mass, high-metallicity galaxies by focusing on SNe discovered in galaxy-targeted SN searches. Our new observations more than double the total number of spectroscopic stellar population age and metallicity measurements published for untargeted SN Ibc host environments, and extend to a median redshift about twice as large as previous statistical studies (z = 0.04). For the 12 SNe Ib and 21 SNe Ic in our metallicity sample, we find median metallicities of log(O/H)+12 = 8.48 and 8.61, respectively, but determine that the discrepancy in the full distribution of metallicities is not statistically significant. This median difference would correspond to only a small difference…
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