Statistical studies of supernova environments
Joseph P. Anderson, Phil A. James, Stacey M. Habergham, Llu\'is, Galbany, Hanindyo Kuncarayakti

TL;DR
This paper reviews statistical analyses of supernova environments, highlighting how different supernova types relate to their host galaxy regions and properties, revealing insights into progenitor characteristics and evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of recent environment studies of supernovae, including pixel statistics, host galaxy spectroscopy, and the implications of metallicity and spatial distribution on progenitor models.
Findings
SNe Ic are more associated with H-alpha emission than SNe Ib.
Interacting SNe IIn often occur in regions with less massive stars.
SN II to SN Ibc ratio shows little variation with metallicity.
Abstract
Investigations of the environments of SNe allow statistical constraints to be made on progenitor properties. We review progress that has been made in this field. Pixel statistics using tracers of e.g. star formation within galaxies show differences in the explosion sites of, in particular SNe types II and Ibc (SNe II and SNe Ibc), suggesting differences in population ages. Of particular interest is that SNe Ic are significantly more associated with H-alpha emission than SNe Ib, implying shorter lifetimes for the former. In addition, such studies have shown that the interacting SNe IIn do not explode in regions containing the most massive stars, which suggests that at least a significant fraction of their progenitors arise from the lower end of the core-collapse SN mass range. Host HII region spectroscopy has been obtained for a significant number of core-collapse events, however…
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