A population of heavily reddened, optically missed novae from Palomar Gattini-IR: Constraints on the Galactic nova rate
Kishalay De, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Matthew J. Hankins, Jennifer L., Sokoloski, Scott M. Adams, Michael C. B. Ashley, Aliya-Nur Babul, Ashot, Bagdasaryan, Alexandre Delacroix, Richard Dekany, Timothee Greffe, David, Hale, Jacob E. Jencson, Viraj R. Karambelkar, Ryan M. Lau

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared observations from Palomar Gattini-IR to identify heavily obscured novae in the Milky Way, revealing a higher nova rate than optical surveys suggest due to dust extinction.
Contribution
It provides the first quantitative estimate of the Galactic nova rate using near-infrared data, highlighting the significance of obscured novae missed by optical surveys.
Findings
Estimated Galactic nova rate is approximately 46 per year.
Over 50% of novae are heavily obscured by dust, undetected in optical surveys.
Near-infrared surveys can significantly increase nova detection completeness.
Abstract
The nova rate in the Milky Way remains largely uncertain, despite its vital importance in constraining models of Galactic chemical evolution as well as understanding progenitor channels for Type Ia supernovae. The rate has been previously estimated in the range of yr, either based on extrapolations from a handful of very bright optical novae or the nova rates in nearby galaxies; both methods are subject to debatable assumptions. The total discovery rate of optical novae remains much smaller ( yr) than these estimates, even with the advent of all-sky optical time domain surveys. Here, we present a systematic sample of 12 spectroscopically confirmed Galactic novae detected in the first 17 months of Palomar Gattini-IR (PGIR), a wide-field near-infrared time domain survey. Operating in -band ( m) that is relatively immune to…
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