SNLS Spectroscopy: Testing for Evolution in Type Ia Supernovae
T. J. Bronder (1), I. M. Hook (1), P. Astier (2), D. Balam (3), C., Balland (2), S. Basa (4), R. G. Carlberg (5), A. Conley (5), D. Fouchez (6),, J. Guy (2), D. A. Howell (5), J. D. Neill (7), R. Pain (2), K. Perrett (5),, C. J. Pritchet (3), N. Regnault (2), M. Sullivan (5)

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-redshift Type Ia supernova spectra from the SNLS to test for evolutionary differences with local supernovae, finding overall similarities and a new correlation that improves distance measurements.
Contribution
The paper provides the first extensive spectroscopic comparison of high-redshift and local SNe Ia, introducing a new correlation to refine luminosity distance estimates.
Findings
High-redshift SNe Ia have similar spectral properties to local ones.
No significant evolution in SN properties with redshift was observed.
A new correlation between peak magnitude and SiII absorption reduces luminosity scatter.
Abstract
Aims: We present a quantitative study of a new data set of high redshift Type Ia supernovae spectra, observed at the Gemini telescopes during the first 34 months of the Supernova Legacy Survey. During this time 123 supernovae candidates were observed, of which 87 have been identified as SNe Ia at a median redshift of z=0.720. Spectra from the entire second year of the survey and part of the third year (59 total SNe candidates with 46 confirmed SNe Ia) are published here for the first time. The spectroscopic measurements made on this data set are used determine if these distant SNe comprise a population similar to those observed locally. Methods: Rest-frame equivalent width and ejection velocity measurements are made on four spectroscopic features. Corresponding measurements are presented for a set of 167 spectra from 24 low-z SNe Ia from the literature. Results: We show that there…
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