Discovering Supernovae at Epoch of Reionization with Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope
Takashi J. Moriya, Robert M. Quimby, Brant E. Robertson

TL;DR
This study proposes an optimized survey strategy using the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope to discover and identify rare superluminous and pair-instability supernovae at redshifts greater than 6, shedding light on early massive star evolution.
Contribution
It identifies effective filter combinations and survey parameters for detecting high-redshift supernovae, enabling direct study of early universe stellar populations.
Findings
Optimal filter combination (F158 and F213) for supernova identification at z > 6.
Estimated discovery of ~22 PISNe and 3 SLSNe at z > 6 over 5 years.
Survey requires approximately 525 hours of observation.
Abstract
Massive stars play critical roles for the reionization of the Universe. Individual massive stars at the reionization epoch (z > 6) are too faint to observe and quantify their contributions to reionization. Some massive stars, however, explode as superluminous supernovae (SLSNe) or pair-instability supernovae (PISNe) that are luminous enough to observe even at z > 6 and allow for the direct characterization of massive star properties at the reionization epoch. In addition, hypothetical long-sought-after PISNe are expected to be present preferentially at high redshifts, and their discovery will have a tremendous impact on our understanding of massive star evolution and the formation of stellar mass black holes. The near-infrared Wide Field Instrument on Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will excel at discovering such rare high-redshift supernovae. In this work, we investigate the best…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
