The Carnegie Supernova Project: First Near-Infrared Hubble Diagram to z~0.7
Wendy L. Freedman, Christopher R. Burns, M. M. Phillips, Pamela Wyatt,, S. E. Persson, Barry F. Madore, Carlos Contreras, Gaston Folatelli, E.Sergio, Gonzalez, Mario Hamuy, Eric Hsiao, Daniel D. Kelson, Nidia Morrell, D. C., Murphy, Miguel Roth, Maximilian Stritzinger

TL;DR
This study presents the first near-infrared Hubble diagram for Type Ia supernovae up to redshift 0.7, supporting the accelerating universe and constraining dark energy properties.
Contribution
It provides new near-infrared observations of SNe Ia at intermediate redshifts, improving constraints on cosmological parameters and highlighting systematic uncertainties in photometric calibration.
Findings
Supports universe acceleration with SNe Ia data
Yields Omega_m = 0.27 and Omega_DE = 0.76
Finds w consistent with -1 within errors
Abstract
The Carnegie Supernova Project (CSP) is designed to measure the luminosity distance for Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) as a function of redshift, and to set observational constraints on the dark energy contribution to the total energy content of the Universe. The CSP differs from other projects to date in its goal of providing an I-band {rest-frame} Hubble diagram. Here we present the first results from near-infrared (NIR) observations obtained using the Magellan Baade telescope for SNe Ia with 0.1 < z < 0.7. We combine these results with those from the low-redshift CSP at z <0.1 (Folatelli et al. 2009). We present light curves and an I-band Hubble diagram for this first sample of 35 SNe Ia and we compare these data to 21 new SNe Ia at low redshift. These data support the conclusion that the expansion of the Universe is accelerating. When combined with independent results from baryon…
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