Back to Search Start Over

ZTF SN Ia DR2: Evidence of Changing Dust Distributions With Redshift Using Type Ia Supernovae

Authors :
Popovic, B.
Rigault, M.
Smith, M.
Ginolin, M.
Goobar, A.
Kenworthy, W. D.
Ganot, C.
Ruppin, F.
Dimitriadis, G.
Johansson, J.
Amenouche, M.
Aubert, M.
Barjou-Delayre, C.
Burgaz, U.
Carreres, B.
Feinstein, F.
Fouchez, D.
Galbany, L.
de Jaeger, T.
Kim, Y. -L.
Lacroix, L.
Nugent, P. E.
Racine, B.
Rosselli, D.
Rosnet, P.
Sollerman, J.
Hale, D.
Laher, R.
Müller-Bravo, T. E.
Reed, R.
Rusholme, B.
Terwel, J.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Type Ia supernova (SNIa) are excellent probes of local distance, and the increasing sample sizes of SNIa have driven an increased need to study the associated systematic uncertainties and improve the standardisation methods in preparation for the next generation of cosmological surveys into the dark energy equation-of-state $w$. We aim to probe the potential change in the SNIa standardisation parameter $c$ with redshift and the host-galaxy of the supernova. Improving the standardisation of SNIa brightnesses will require accounting for the relationship between the host and the SNIa, and potential shifts in the SNIa standardisation parameters with redshift will cause biases in the recovered cosmology. Here, we assemble a volume-limited sample of ~3000 likely SNIa across a redshift range of $z = 0.015$ to $z = 0.36$. This sample is fitted with changing mass and redshift bins to determine the relationship between intrinsic properties of SNe Ia and their redshift and host galaxy parameters. We then investigate the colour-luminosity parameter $\beta$ as a further test of the SNIa standardisation process. We find that the changing colour distribution of SNe Ia with redshift is driven by dust at a confidence of $>4\sigma$. Additionally, we show a strong correlation between the host galaxy mass and the colour-luminosity coefficient $\beta$ ($> 4\sigma$), even when accounting for the quantity of dust in a host galaxy.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.06215
Document Type :
Working Paper