The Statistics and Environments of Hostless Supernovae
Yu-Jing Qin, Ann Zabludoff, Iair Arcavi, Nathan Smith, Yakov Faerman,, Dan Maoz

TL;DR
This study analyzes the demographics and environments of 161 hostless supernovae, revealing their association with faint, star-forming dwarf galaxies and highlighting differences from supernovae with known hosts.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive characterization of hostless supernovae, including their luminosity, host properties, and spatial distribution, using new photometric data and analysis.
Findings
Over-representation of superluminous and interacting supernovae among hostless SNe.
Most hostless SNe are not associated with galaxy groups or clusters.
Hostless Type Ia SNe are more luminous and slower-fading, indicating hidden low-mass hosts.
Abstract
Transient surveys routinely detect supernovae (SNe) without obvious host galaxies. To understand the demographics of these "hostless" SNe and to constrain the possible host properties, we identify 161 SNe reported to the Transient Name Server since 2016 that do not have hosts cataloged from pre-explosion wide-field galaxy surveys. Using forced aperture photometry, we detect excess flux around only 56 of these SNe. Both thermonuclear and core-collapse (CC) SNe are present in our sample. Compared to flux-limited SNe samples with known hosts, superluminous supernovae (SLSNe), particularly hydrogen-deficient SLSNe, are over-represented here relative to all other SNe types; among CC SNe, there is also a higher fraction of interacting SNe than non-interacting. On the low-luminosity side, seven SNe have host absolute magnitude upper limits fainter than M_g=-12, about 1 per cent of the Small…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
