Browsing by Author "Fernandez, J. M."
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- ItemMillimagnitude photometry for transiting extrasolar planetary candidates V. Follow-up of 30 OGLE transits. New candidates(EDP SCIENCES S A, 2010) Pietrukowicz, P.; Minniti, D.; Diaz, R. F.; Fernandez, J. M.; Zoccali, M.; Gieren, W.; Pietrzynski, G.; Ruiz, M. T.; Udalski, A.; Szeifert, T.; Hempel, M.Aims. We used VLT/VIMOS images in the V band to obtain light curves of the extrasolar planetary transits OGLE-TR-111 and OGLE-TR-113 and the candidate planetary transits: OGLE-TR-82, OGLE-TR-86, OGLE-TR-91, OGLE-TR-106, OGLE-TR-109, OGLE-TR-110, OGLE-TR-159, OGLE-TR-167, OGLE-TR-170, OGLE-TR-171.
- ItemThe ASAS-SN bright supernova catalogue - I. 2013-2014(OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2017) Holoien, T. W. S.; Stanek, K. Z.; Kochanek, C. S.; Shappee, B. J.; Prieto, J. L.; Brimacombe, J.; Bersier, D.; Bishop, D. W.; Dong, Subo; Brown, J. S.; Danilet, A. B.; Simonian, G. V.; Basu, U.; Beacom, J. F.; Falco, E.; Pojmanski, G.; Skowron, D. M.; Wozniak, P. R.; Avila, C. G.; Conseil, E.; Contreras, C.; Cruz, I.; Fernandez, J. M.; Koff, R. A.; Guo, Zhen; Herczeg, G. J.; Hissong, J.; Hsiao, E. Y.; Jose, J.; Kiyota, S.; Long, Feng; Monard, L. A. G.; Nicholls, B.; Nicolas, J.; Wiethoff, W. S.We present basic statistics for all supernovae discovered by the All-Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN) during its first year-and-a-half of operations, spanning 2013 and 2014. We also present the same information for all other bright (mV <= 17), spectroscopically confirmed supernovae discovered from 2014 May 1 through the end of 2014, providing a comparison to the ASAS-SN sample starting from the point where ASAS-SN became operational in both hemispheres. In addition, we present collected redshifts and near-UV through IR magnitudes, where available, for all host galaxies of the bright supernovae in both samples. This work represents a comprehensive catalogue of bright supernovae and their hosts from multiple professional and amateur sources, allowing for population studies that were not previously possible because the all-sky emphasis of ASAS-SN redresses many previously existing biases. In particular, ASAS-SN systematically finds bright supernovae closer to the centres of host galaxies than either other professional surveys or amateurs, a remarkable result given ASAS-SN's poorer angular resolution. This is the first of a series of yearly papers on bright supernovae and their hosts that will be released by the ASAS-SN team.
- ItemThe ASAS-SN bright supernova catalogue - V. 2018-2020(2023) Neumann, K. D.; Holoien, T. W-S; Kochanek, C. S.; Stanek, K. Z.; Vallely, P. J.; Shappee, B. J.; Prieto, J. L.; Pessi, T.; Jayasinghe, T.; Brimacombe, J.; Bersier, D.; Aydi, E.; Basinger, C.; Beacom, J. F.; Bose, S.; Brown, J. S.; Chen, P.; Clocchiatti, A.; Desai, D. D.; Dong, Subo; Falco, E.; Holmbo, S.; Morrell, N.; Shields, J. V.; Sokolovsky, K. V.; Strader, J.; Stritzinger, M. D.; Swihart, S.; Thompson, T. A.; Way, Z.; Aslan, L.; Bishop, D. W.; Bock, G.; Bradshaw, J.; Cacella, P.; Castro-Morales, N.; Conseil, E.; Cornect, R.; Cruz, I.; Farfan, R. G.; Fernandez, J. M.; Gabuya, A.; Gonzalez-Carballo, J-L; Kendurkar, M. R.; Kiyota, S.; Koff, R. A.; Krannich, G.; Marples, P.; Masi, G.; Monard, L. A. G.; Munoz, J. A.; Nicholls, B.; Post, R. S.; Pujic, Z.; Stone, G.; Tomasella, L.; Trappett, D. L.; Wiethoff, W. S.We catalogue the 443 bright supernovae (SNe) discovered by the All-Sky Automated Survey for Supernovae (ASAS-SN) in 2018-2020 along with the 519 SNe recovered by ASAS-SN and 516 additional m(peak) <= 18 mag SNe missed by ASAS-SN. Our statistical analysis focuses primarily on the 984 SNe discovered or recovered in ASAS-SN g-band observations. The complete sample of 2427 ASAS-SN SNe includes earlier V-band samples and unrecovered SNe. For each SN, we identify the host galaxy, its UV to mid-IR photometry, and the SN's offset from the centre of the host. Updated peak magnitudes, redshifts, spectral classifications, and host galaxy identifications supersede earlier results. With the increase of the limiting magnitude to g <= 18 mag, the ASAS-SN sample is nearly complete up to m(peak) = 16.7 mag and is 90 per cent complete for m(peak) <= 17.0 mag. This is an increase from the V-band sample, where it was roughly complete up to m(peak) = 16.2 mag and 70 per cent complete for m(peak) <= 17.0 mag.