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ZTF SN Ia DR2: Impact of the galaxy cluster environment on the stretch distribution of Type Ia supernovae

Authors :
Ruppin, F.
Rigault, M.
Ginolin, M.
Dimitriadis, G.
Goobar, A.
Johansson, J.
Maguire, K.
Nordin, J.
Smith, M.
Aubert, M.
Biedermann, J.
Copin, Y.
Burgaz, U.
Carreres, B.
Feinstein, F.
Fouchez, D.
Muller-Bravo, T. E.
Galbany, L.
Groom, S. L.
Kenworthy, W. D.
Kim, Y. -L.
Laher, R. R.
Nugent, P.
Popovic, B.
Purdum, J.
Racine, B.
Rosnet, P.
Rosselli, D.
Sollerman, J.
Terwel, J. H.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Understanding the impact of the astrophysical environment on Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) properties is crucial to minimize systematic uncertainties in cosmological analyses based on this probe. We investigate the dependence of the SN Ia SALT2.4 light-curve stretch on the distance from their nearest galaxy cluster to study a potential effect of the intracluster medium (ICM) environment on SN Ia intrinsic properties. We use the largest SN Ia sample to date and cross-match it with existing X-ray, Sunyaev-Zel'dovich, and optical cluster catalogs in order to study the dependence between stretch and distance to the nearest detected cluster from each SN Ia. We model the underlying stretch distribution with a Gaussian mixture with relative amplitudes that depend on redshift and cluster-centric distance. We find a significant improvement of the fit quality of the stretch distribution if we include the distance-dependant term in the model with a variation of the Akaike information criterion $\rm{\Delta AIC} = -10.2$. Because of the known correlation between galaxy age and distance from cluster center, this supports previous evidence that the age of the stellar population is the underlying driver of the bimodial shape of the SN Ia stretch distribution. We further compute the evolution of the fraction of quenched galaxies as a function of distance with respect to cluster center from our best-fit model of the SNe Ia stretch distribution and compare it to previous results obtained from $H\alpha$ line measurements, optical broadband photometry, and simulations. We find our estimate to be compatible with these results. The results of this work indicate that SNe Ia searches at high redshift targeted towards clusters to maximize detection probability should be considered with caution as the stretch distribution of the detected sample would be strongly biased towards the old sub-population of SNe Ia.<br />Comment: Submitted to Astronomy & Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.01108
Document Type :
Working Paper