Improved Dark Energy Constraints from ~100 New CfA Supernova Type Ia Light Curves
Malcolm Hicken, W. Michael Wood-Vasey, Stephane Blondin, Peter, Challis, Saurabh Jha, Patrick L. Kelly, Armin Rest, Robert P. Kirshner

TL;DR
This study combines extensive supernova data to refine dark energy constraints, evaluates systematic uncertainties across light curve fitters, and explores host galaxy effects on supernova luminosity, aiming to improve cosmological measurements.
Contribution
It provides improved dark energy constraints using a larger supernova sample and assesses systematic differences among light curve fitters and host galaxy effects.
Findings
Consistent with a cosmological constant (w ≈ -1).
MLCS2k2 overestimates luminosity for certain supernovae.
SN Ia in different host galaxy types show intrinsic luminosity differences.
Abstract
We combine the CfA3 supernova Type Ia (SN Ia) sample with samples from the literature to calculate improved constraints on the dark energy equation of state parameter, w. The CfA3 sample is added to the Union set of Kowalski et al. (2008) to form the Constitution set and, combined with a BAO prior, produces 1+w=0.013 +0.066/-0.068 (0.11 syst), consistent with the cosmological constant. The CfA3 addition makes the cosmologically-useful sample of nearby SN Ia between 2.6 and 2.9 times larger than before, reducing the statistical uncertainty to the point where systematics play the largest role. We use four light curve fitters to test for systematic differences: SALT, SALT2, MLCS2k2 (R_V=3.1), and MLCS2k2 (R_V=1.7). SALT produces high-redshift Hubble residuals with systematic trends versus color and larger scatter than MLCS2k2. MLCS2k2 overestimates the intrinsic luminosity of SN Ia with…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae
