Back to Search Start Over

A galaxy-driven model of type Ia supernova luminosity variations

Authors :
Wiseman, P.
Vincenzi, M.
Sullivan, M.
Kelsey, L.
Popovic, B.
Rose, B.
Brout, D.
Davis, T. M.
Frohmaier, C.
Galbany, L.
Lidman, C.
Möller, A.
Scolnic, D.
Smith, M.
Aguena, M.
Allam, S.
Andrade-Oliveira, F.
Annis, J.
Bertin, E.
Bocquet, S.
Brooks, D.
Burke, D. L.
Rosell, A. Carnero
Kind, M. Carrasco
Carretero, J.
Castander, F. J.
Costanzi, M.
Pereira, M. E. S.
Desai, S.
Diehl, H. T.
Doel, P.
Everett, S.
Ferrero, I.
Friedel, D.
Frieman, J.
García-Bellido, J.
Gatti, M.
Gaztanaga, E.
Gruen, D.
Gschwend, J.
Gutierrez, G.
Hinton, S. R.
Hollowood, D. L.
Honscheid, K.
James, D. J.
March, M.
Menanteau, F.
Miquel, R.
Morgan, R.
Palmese, A.
Paz-Chinchón, F.
Pieres, A.
Malagón, A. A. Plazas
Romer, A. K.
Sanchez, E.
Scarpine, V.
Sevilla-Noarbe, I.
Santos, M. Soares
Suchyta, E.
Tarle, G.
To, C.
Varga, T. N.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are used as standardisable candles to measure cosmological distances, but differences remain in their corrected luminosities which display a magnitude step as a function of host galaxy properties such as stellar mass and rest-frame $U-R$ colour. Identifying the cause of these steps is key to cosmological analyses and provides insight into SN physics. Here we investigate the effects of SN progenitor ages on their light curve properties using a galaxy-based forward model that we compare to the Dark Energy Survey 5-year SN Ia sample. We trace SN Ia progenitors through time and draw their light-curve width parameters from a bimodal distribution according to their age. We find that an intrinsic luminosity difference between SNe of different ages cannot explain the observed trend between step size and SN colour. The data split by stellar mass are better reproduced by following recent work implementing a step in total-to-selective dust extinction ratio $(R_V)$ between low- and high-mass hosts, although an additional intrinsic luminosity step is still required to explain the data split by host galaxy $U-R$. Modelling the $R_V$ step as a function of galaxy age provides a better match overall. Additional age vs. luminosity steps marginally improve the match to the data, although most of the step is absorbed by the width vs. luminosity coefficient $\alpha$. Furthermore, we find no evidence that $\alpha$ varies with SN age.<br />Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.05583
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac1984