Paper
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
0

SUPERNOVA CONSTRAINTS AND SYSTEMATIC UNCERTAINTIES FROM THE FIRST THREE YEARS OF THE SUPERNOVA LEGACY SURVEY

Authors
A. Conley,J. Guy
M. Sullivan,N. Regnault,P. Astier,C. Balland,S. Basa,R. G. Carlberg,D. Fouchez,D. Hardin,I. M. Hook,D. A. Howell,R. Pain,N. Palanque-Delabrouille,K. M. Perrett,C. J. Pritchet,J. Rich,V. Ruhlmann-Kleider,D. Balam,S. Baumont,R. S. Ellis,S. Fabbro,H. K. Fakhouri,N. Fourmanoit,S. Gonzalez-Gaitan,M. L. Graham,M. J. Hudson,E. Hsiao,T. Kronborg,C. Lidman,A. M. Mourao,J. D. Neill,S. Perlmutter,P. Ripoche,N. Suzuki,E. S. Walker,R. Carlberg,I. Hook,D. Howell,N. Palanque‐Delabrouille,K. Perrett,C. Pritchet,Richard Ellis,H. Fakhouri,S. Fotopoulou,S. González–Gaitán,M. Graham,Michael Hudson,A. Mourão,James Neill
+48 authors
,E. Walker
Published
Dec 13, 2010
Show more
Save
TipTip
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content
0
TipTip
Save
Document
Submit new version
Download
Flag content

Abstract

We combine high redshift Type Ia supernovae from the first 3 years of the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS) with other supernova (SN) samples, primarily at lower redshifts, to form a high-quality joint sample of 472 SNe (123 low-$z$, 93 SDSS, 242 SNLS, and 14 {\it Hubble Space Telescope}). SN data alone require cosmic acceleration at >99.9% confidence, including systematic effects. For the dark energy equation of state parameter (assumed constant out to at least $z=1.4$) in a flat universe, we find $w = -0.91^{+0.16}_{-0.20}(\mathrm{stat}) ^{+0.07}_{-0.14} (\mathrm{sys})$ from SNe only, consistent with a cosmological constant. Our fits include a correction for the recently discovered relationship between host-galaxy mass and SN absolute brightness. We pay particular attention to systematic uncertainties, characterizing them using a systematics covariance matrix that incorporates the redshift dependence of these effects, as well as the shape-luminosity and color-luminosity relationships. Unlike previous work, we include the effects of systematic terms on the empirical light-curve models. The total systematic uncertainty is dominated by calibration terms. We describe how the systematic uncertainties can be reduced with soon to be available improved nearby and intermediate-redshift samples, particularly those calibrated onto USNO/SDSS-like systems.

Paper PDF

This paper's license is marked as closed access or non-commercial and cannot be viewed on ResearchHub. Visit the paper's external site.