The MOST Hosts Survey: spectroscopic observation of the host galaxies of ~40,000 transients using DESI
Maayane T. Soumagnac, Peter Nugent, Robert A. Knop, Anna Y. Q. Ho,, William Hohensee, Autumn Awbrey, Alexis Andersen, Greg Aldering, Matan, Ventura, Jessica N. Aguilar, Steven Ahlen, Segev Y. Benzvi, David Brooks,, Dillon Brout, Todd Claybaugh, Tamara M. Davis, Kyle Dawson

TL;DR
The MOST Hosts survey uses DESI to spectroscopically observe and catalog host galaxies of around 40,000 transients, aiding supernova cosmology and transient classification.
Contribution
This work presents the first data release of the MOST Hosts survey, providing a large spectroscopic catalog of transient host galaxies and supporting future transient classification efforts.
Findings
First release includes 21,931 hosts of 20,235 transients.
Provides redshifts for nearly 30,000 transients.
Enables improved supernova cosmology and transient classification.
Abstract
We present the MOST Hosts survey (Multi-Object Spectroscopy of Transient Hosts). The survey is planned to run throughout the five years of operation of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) and will generate a spectroscopic catalog of the hosts of most transients observed to date, in particular all the supernovae observed by most public, untargeted, wide-field, optical surveys (PTF/iPTF, SDSS II, ZTF, DECAT, DESIRT). Scientific questions for which the MOST Hosts survey will be useful include Type Ia supernova cosmology, fundamental plane and peculiar velocity measurements, and the understanding of the correlations between transients and their host galaxy properties. Here, we present the first release of the MOST Hosts survey: 21,931 hosts of 20,235 transients. These numbers represent 36% of the final MOST Hosts sample, consisting of 60,212 potential host galaxies of 38,603…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
