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COSMOLOGY WITH PHOTOMETRICALLY CLASSIFIED TYPE Ia SUPERNOVAE FROM THE SDSS-II SUPERNOVA SURVEY

Authors :
Campbell, Heather
D'Andrea, Chris B.
Nichol, Robert C.
Sako, Masao
Smith, Mathew
Lampeitl, Hubert
Olmstead, Matthew D.
Bassett, Bruce
Biswas, Rahul
Brown, Peter
Cinabro, David
Dawson, Kyle S.
Dilday, Ben
Foley, Ryan J.
Frieman, Joshua A.
Garnavich, Peter
Hlozek, Renee
Jha, Saurabh W.
Kuhlmann, Steve
Kunz, Martin
Marriner, John
Miquel, Ramon
Richmond, Michael
Riess, Adam
Schneider, Donald P.
Sollerman, Jesper
Taylor, Matt
Zhao, Gong-Bo
Campbell, Heather
D'Andrea, Chris B.
Nichol, Robert C.
Sako, Masao
Smith, Mathew
Lampeitl, Hubert
Olmstead, Matthew D.
Bassett, Bruce
Biswas, Rahul
Brown, Peter
Cinabro, David
Dawson, Kyle S.
Dilday, Ben
Foley, Ryan J.
Frieman, Joshua A.
Garnavich, Peter
Hlozek, Renee
Jha, Saurabh W.
Kuhlmann, Steve
Kunz, Martin
Marriner, John
Miquel, Ramon
Richmond, Michael
Riess, Adam
Schneider, Donald P.
Sollerman, Jesper
Taylor, Matt
Zhao, Gong-Bo
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

We present the cosmological analysis of 752 photometrically classified Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) obtained from the full Sloan Digital Sky Survey II (SDSS-II) Supernova (SN) Survey, supplemented with host-galaxy spectroscopy from the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey. Our photometric-classification method is based on the SN classification technique of Sako et al., aided by host-galaxy redshifts (0.05 < z < 0.55). SuperNova ANAlysis simulations of our methodology estimate that we have an SN Ia classification efficiency of 70.8%, with only 3.9% contamination from core-collapse (non-Ia) SNe. We demonstrate that this level of contamination has no effect on our cosmological constraints. We quantify and correct for our selection effects (e. g., Malmquist bias) using simulations. When fitting to a flat.CDM cosmological model, we find that our photometric sample alone gives Omega(m) = 0.24(-0.05)(+0.07) (statistical errors only). If we relax the constraint on flatness, then our sample provides competitive joint statistical constraints on Omega(m) and Omega(Lambda), comparable to those derived from the spectroscopically confirmed Three-year Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS3). Using only our data, the statistics-only result favors an accelerating universe at 99.96% confidence. Assuming a constant wCDM cosmological model, and combining with H-0, cosmic microwave background, and luminous red galaxy data, we obtain w = -0.96(-0.10)(+0.10), Omega(m) = 0.29(-0.02)(+0.02), and Omega(k) = 0.00(-0.02)(+0.03)(statistical errors only), which is competitive with similar spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia analyses. Overall this comparison is reassuring, considering the lower redshift leverage of the SDSS-II SN sample (z < 0.55) and the lack of spectroscopic confirmation used herein. These results demonstrate the potential of photometrically classified SN Ia samples in improving cosmological constraints.<br />AuthorCount:28

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234744001
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088.0004-637X.763.2.88