Supernova rates from the SUDARE VST-Omegacam search II. Rates in a galaxy sample
M.T. Botticella, E. Cappellaro, L. Greggio, G. Pignata, M. Della, Valle, A. Grado, L. Limatola, A. Baruffolo, S. Benetti, F. Bufano, M., Capaccioli, E. Cascone, G. Covone, D. De Cicco, S. Falocco, B. Haeussler, V., Harutyunyan, M. Jarvis, L. Marchetti, N. R. Napolitano

TL;DR
This study analyzes supernova rates in a large galaxy sample, revealing how Type Ia and core-collapse supernovae correlate with galaxy properties like star formation and mass, and comparing observations with theoretical models.
Contribution
It provides new insights into supernova rate dependencies on galaxy characteristics and tests multiple progenitor models against observed data.
Findings
SN Ia rate per unit mass is higher in star-forming and less massive galaxies.
CC SN rate correlates with specific star formation rate and galaxy mass.
Observed SN rates generally agree with models, but suggest a higher minimum progenitor mass for CC SNe.
Abstract
This is the second paper of a series in which we present measurements of the Supernova (SN) rates from the SUDARE survey. In this paper, we study the trend of the SN rates with the intrinsic colours, the star formation activity and the mass of the parent galaxies. We have considered a sample of about 130000 galaxies and a SN sample of about 50 events. We found that the SN Ia rate per unit mass is higher by a factor of six in the star-forming galaxies with respect to the passive galaxies. The SN Ia rate per unit mass is also higher in the less massive galaxies that are also younger. These results suggest a distribution of the delay times (DTD) less populated at long delay times than at short delays. The CC SN rate per unit mass is proportional to both the sSFR and the galaxy mass. The trends of the Type Ia and CC SN rates as a function of the sSFR and the galaxy mass that we observed…
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