Abstract

Current time domain facilities are discovering hundreds of new galactic and extra-galactic transients every week. Classifying the ever-increasing number of transients is challenging, yet crucial to furthering our understanding of their nature, discovering new classes, and ensuring sample purity, for instance, for Supernova Ia cosmology. The Zwicky Transient Facility is one example of such a survey. In addition, it has a dedicated very-low resolution spectrograph, the SEDMachine, operating on the Palomar 60-inch telescope. This spectrograph’s primary aim is object classification. In practice most, if not all, transients of interest brighter than ∼19 mag are typed. This corresponds to approximately 10–15 targets a night. In this paper, we present a fully automated pipeline for the SEDMachine. This pipeline has been designed to be fast, robust, stable and extremely flexible. pysedm enables the fully automated spectral extraction of a targeted point source object in less than five minutes after the end of the exposure. The spectral color calibration is accurate at the few percent level. In the 19 weeks since pysedm entered production in early August of 2018, we have classified, among other objects, about 400 Type Ia supernovae and 140 Type II supernovae. We conclude that low resolution, fully automated spectrographs such as the “SEDMachine with pysedm” installed on 2-m class telescopes within the southern hemisphere could allow us to automatically and simultaneously type and obtain a redshift for most (if not all) bright transients detected by LSST within z < 0.2, notably potentially all Type Ia Supernovae. In comparison with the current SEDM design, this would require higher spectral resolution (R ≳ 1000) and slightly improved throughput. With this perspective in mind, pysedm is designed to easily be adaptable to any IFU-like spectrograph.

Highlights

  • Time domain astronomy, the study of transients, variables and/or moving objects, is one of the frontier fields of this decade

  • The Palomar 60 (P60) acquisition offset fails, and we find with the “guider-astrometry position” method that the target is outside the micro-lens array (MLA)

  • The ZTF collaboration is using this instrument to type the transients discovered by the ZTF camera mounted on the Palomar 48 Schmidt (P48) telescope

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Summary

Introduction

The study of transients, variables and/or moving objects, is one of the frontier fields of this decade. While scanning the sky every night with a typical 5σ magnitude limit of 20.5, ZTF detects of order 105 variations in the sky between a new observation and a past reference frame, generating an alert for each. While most of these alerts are glitches or already known variable sources, about O(102) of them are transients of interest. Soon the Large Synoptic Surhttps://github.com/MickaelRigault/pysedm vey Telescope (LSST, LSST Science Collaboration 2009), with a magnitude limit of 27.5 in r-band, will detect ten times more transients than ZTF, resulting in hundreds of new extra-galactic events every night

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