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PS1-10awh , the SIMBAD biblio (46 results) | C.D.S. - SIMBAD4 rel 1.8 - 2024.04.20CEST03:53:42 |
Bibcode/DOI | Score |
in Title|Abstract| Keywords |
in a table | in teXt, Caption, ... | Nb occurence | Nb objects in ref |
Citations (from ADS) |
Title | First 3 Authors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011ApJ...743..114C | 3230 | K A | D | S X C | 83 | 17 | 166 | Pan-STARRS1 discovery of two ultraluminous supernovae at z ~ 0.9. | CHOMIUK L., CHORNOCK R., SODERBERG A.M., et al. |
2012MNRAS.422.2675T | 40 | X | 1 | 15 | 42 | Detectability of high-redshift superluminous supernovae with upcoming optical and near-infrared surveys. | TANAKA M., MORIYA T.J., YOSHIDA N., et al. | ||
2012A&A...541A.129L | 6 | 10 | 130 | SN 2006oz: rise of a super-luminous supernova observed by the SDSS-II SN survey. | LELOUDAS G., CHATZOPOULOS E., DILDAY B., et al. | ||||
2012Sci...337..927G | 7 | 31 | 493 | Luminous supernovae. | GAL-YAM A. | ||||
2013MNRAS.431..912Q | 19 | D | 1 | 25 | 151 | Rates of superluminous supernovae at z ∼ 0.2. | QUIMBY R.M., YUAN F., AKERLOF C., et al. | ||
2013ApJ...767..162C | 117 | X C | 2 | 26 | 45 | PS1-10afx at z = 1.388: Pan-STARRS1 discovery of a new type of superluminous supernova. | CHORNOCK R., BERGER E., REST A., et al. | ||
2013ApJ...771...97L | 197 | X C | 4 | 15 | 70 | PS1-10bzj: a fast, hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova in a metal-poor host galaxy. | LUNNAN R., CHORNOCK R., BERGER E., et al. | ||
2013ApJ...773...12S | 39 | X | 1 | 73 | 32 | Probing the low-redshift star formation rate as a function of metallicity through the local environments of type II supernovae. | STOLL R., PRIETO J.L., STANEK K.Z., et al. | ||
2013ApJ...773...76C | 42 | X | 1 | 23 | 177 | Analytical light curve models of superluminous supernovae: χ2-minimization of parameter fits. | CHATZOPOULOS E., WHEELER J.C., VINKO J., et al. | ||
2014MNRAS.437..656M | 40 | X | 1 | 19 | 62 | The superluminous supernova PS1-11ap: bridging the gap between low and high redshift. | McCRUM M., SMARTT S.J., KOTAK R., et al. | ||
2014ApJ...787..138L | 215 | D | X | 6 | 32 | 225 | Hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae and long-duration gamma-ray bursts have similar host galaxies. | LUNNAN R., CHORNOCK R., BERGER E., et al. | |
2014A&A...565A..70K | 237 | X C | 5 | 14 | 50 | Observational properties of low-redshift pair instability supernovae. | KOZYREVA A., BLINNIKOV S., LANGER N., et al. | ||
2012ATel.3918....1S | 39 | X | 1 | 5 | 5 | PS1-12fo (=CSS120121): luminous Ic supernova at z=0.175 in the PS1 3Pi survey. | SMARTT S.J., WRIGHT D., VALENTI S., et al. | ||
2014ApJ...796...87I | 40 | X | 1 | 28 | 79 | Superluminous supernovae as standardizable candles and high-redshift distance probes. | INSERRA C. and SMARTT S.J. | ||
2014ApJ...797...24V | 17 | D | 1 | 20 | 71 | The hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova iPTF 13ajg and its host galaxy in absorption and emission. | VREESWIJK P.M., SAVAGLIO S., GAL-YAM A., et al. | ||
2015MNRAS.448.1206M | 810 | D | X C | 20 | 272 | 59 | Selecting superluminous supernovae in faint galaxies from the first year of the Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey. | McCRUM M., SMARTT S.J., REST A., et al. | |
2015ApJ...804...90L | 17 | D | 3 | 19 | 56 | Zooming in on the progenitors of superluminous supernovae with the HST. | LUNNAN R., CHORNOCK R., BERGER E., et al. | ||
2015MNRAS.449.1215P | 119 | X | 3 | 25 | 41 | DES13S2cmm: the first superluminous supernova from the Dark Energy Survey. | PAPADOPOULOS A., D'ANDREA C.B., SULLIVAN M., et al. | ||
2015MNRAS.452.3869N | 41 | X | 1 | 55 | 156 | On the diversity of superluminous supernovae: ejected mass as the dominant factor. | NICHOLL M., SMARTT S.J., JERKSTRAND A., et al. | ||
2016ApJ...819....5T | 121 | X C | 2 | 25 | 49 | Rapidly rising transients from the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam transient survey. | TANAKA M., TOMINAGA N., MOROKUMA T., et al. | ||
2016MNRAS.457L..79N | 259 | D | X C F | 5 | 14 | 35 | Seeing double: the frequency and detectability of double-peaked superluminous supernova light curves. | NICHOLL M. and SMARTT S.J. | |
2016ApJ...826...39N | 47 | X | 1 | 18 | 133 | SN 2015BN: a detailed multi-wavelength view of a nearby superluminous supernova. | NICHOLL M., BERGER E., SMARTT S.J., et al. | ||
2017MNRAS.464.3568P | 17 | D | 2 | 25 | 46 | The volumetric rate of superluminous supernovae at z ∼ 1. | PRAJS S., SULLIVAN M., SMITH M., et al. | ||
2017ApJ...840...12Y | 17 | D | 3 | 38 | 51 | A statistical study of superluminous supernovae using the magnetar engine model and implications for their connection with gamma-ray bursts and hypernovae. | YU Y.-W., ZHU J.-P., LI S.-Z., et al. | ||
2017ApJ...842...26L | 260 | D | X C | 6 | 26 | 23 | A Monte Carlo approach to magnetar-powered transients. I. Hydrogen-deficient superluminous supernovae. | LIU L.-D., WANG S.-Q., WANG L.-J., et al. | |
2017ApJ...845...85L | 180 | D | X C | 4 | 47 | 77 | Analyzing the largest spectroscopic data set of hydrogen-poor super-luminous supernovae. | LIU Y.-Q., MODJAZ M. and BIANCO F.B. | |
2017ApJ...850...55N | 20 | D | 2 | 41 | 176 | The magnetar model for Type I superluminous supernovae. I. Bayesian analysis of the full multicolor light-curve sample with MOSFiT. | NICHOLL M., GUILLOCHON J. and BERGER E. | ||
2018ApJ...852...81L | 18 | D | 3 | 32 | 93 | Hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae from the Pan-STARRS1 Medium Deep Survey. | LUNNAN R., CHORNOCK R., BERGER E., et al. | ||
2018MNRAS.473.1258S | 17 | D | 2 | 75 | 131 | Cosmic evolution and metal aversion in superluminous supernova host galaxies. | SCHULZE S., KRUHLER T., LELOUDAS G., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...854..175I | 82 | C | 1 | 48 | 19 | A statistical approach to identify superluminous supernovae and probe their diversity. | INSERRA C., PRAJS S., GUTIERREZ C.P., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...855....2Q | 17 | D | 2 | 63 | 93 | Spectra of hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae from the Palomar Transient Factory. | QUIMBY R.M., DE CIA A., GAL-YAM A., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...856...56C | 182 | D | X | 5 | 26 | 32 | Jets in hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae: constraints from a comprehensive analysis of radio observations. | COPPEJANS D.L., MARGUTTI R., GUIDORZI C., et al. | |
2018A&A...611A..45R | 82 | X | 2 | 47 | 13 | Search for γ-ray emission from superluminous supernovae with the Fermi-LAT. | RENAULT-TINACCI N., KOTERA K., NERONOV A., et al. | ||
2018ApJ...867..113M | 16 | D | 2 | 37 | 11 | Systematic investigation of the fallback accretion-powered model for hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae. | MORIYA T.J., NICHOLL M. and GUILLOCHON J. | ||
2018ApJ...869..166V | 16 | D | 1 | 58 | 6 | Superluminous supernovae in LSST: rates, detection metrics, and light-curve modeling. | VILLAR V.A., NICHOLL M. and BERGER E. | ||
2020ApJ...897..114B | 17 | D | 1 | 67 | ~ | The pre-explosion mass distribution of hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova progenitors and new evidence for a mass-spin correlation. | BLANCHARD P.K., BERGER E., NICHOLL M., et al. | ||
2020ApJ...904...74G | 17 | D | 1 | 145 | ~ | FLEET: a redshift-agnostic machine learning pipeline to rapidly identify hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae. | GOMEZ S., BERGER E., BLANCHARD P.K., et al. | ||
2020A&A...643A..47O | 17 | D | 1 | 93 | ~ | The interacting nature of dwarf galaxies hosting superluminous supernovae. | ORUM S.V., IVENS D.L., STRANDBERG P., et al. | ||
2021ApJ...909...24K | 17 | D | 1 | 93 | ~ | Photospheric velocity gradients and ejecta masses of hydrogen-poor superluminous supernovae: proxies for distinguishing between fast and slow events. | KONYVES-TOTH R. and VINKO J. | ||
2021MNRAS.502.1678K | 44 | X | 1 | 51 | 12 | SN 2020ank: a bright and fast-evolving H-deficient superluminous supernova. | KUMAR A., KUMAR B., PANDEY S.B., et al. | ||
2021ApJ...912...21E | 17 | D | 1 | 125 | 18 | Late-time radio and millimeter observations of superluminous supernovae and long gamma-ray bursts: implications for central engines, fast radio bursts, and obscured star formation. | EFTEKHARI T., MARGALIT B., OMAND C.M.B., et al. | ||
2022ApJ...931..153S | 18 | D | 1 | 84 | 5 | Constraints on the Explosion Timescale of Core-collapse Supernovae Based on Systematic Analysis of Light Curves. | SAITO S., TANAKA M., SAWADA R., et al. | ||
2022MNRAS.514.2627C | 63 | D | X | 2 | 63 | 5 | A puzzle solved after two decades: SN 2002gh among the brightest of superluminous supernovae. | CARTIER R., HAMUY M., CONTRERAS C., et al. | |
2022ApJ...941..107G | 45 | X | 1 | 238 | 16 | Luminous Supernovae: Unveiling a Population between Superluminous and Normal Core-collapse Supernovae. | GOMEZ S., BERGER E., NICHOLL M., et al. | ||
2023MNRAS.521.2814K | 112 | D | F | 8 | 24 | 1 | The rest-frame ultraviolet of superluminous supernovae - I. Potential as cosmological probes. | KHETAN N., COOKE J. and BRANCHESI M. | |
2024ApJ...961..169H | 20 | D | 2 | 110 | ~ | An Extensive Hubble Space Telescope Study of the Offset and Host Light Distributions of Type I Superluminous Supernovae. | HSU B., BLANCHARD P.K., BERGER E., et al. |