The Local Hosts of Type Ia Supernovae
James D. Neill, Mark Sullivan, D. Andy Howell, Alex Conley, Mark, Seibert, D. Christopher Martin, Tom A. Barlow, Karl Foster, Peter G., Friedman, Patrick Morrissey, Susan G. Neff, David Schiminovich, Ted K. Wyder,, Luciana Bianchi, Jos\'e Donas, Timothy M. Heckman

TL;DR
This study analyzes the properties of galaxies hosting Type Ia supernovae, revealing how host galaxy characteristics like mass and age influence supernova brightness, speed, and nickel production, with implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how host galaxy properties affect Type Ia supernovae, including the role of mass, age, and metallicity, and suggests host age as a useful parameter in supernova cosmology.
Findings
Faintest and fastest SNe Ia occur only in galaxies with stellar mass > 10^10 M_sun.
Older hosts tend to produce less-extincted SNe Ia after light-curve correction.
There is a shallow, inconclusive trend between metallicity and 56Ni mass.
Abstract
We use multi-wavelength, matched aperture, integrated photometry from GALEX, SDSS and the RC3 to estimate the physical properties of 166 nearby galaxies hosting 168 well-observed Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia). Our data corroborate well-known features that have been seen in other SN Ia samples. Specifically, hosts with active star formation produce brighter and slower SNe Ia on average, and hosts with luminosity-weighted ages older than 1 Gyr produce on average more faint, fast and fewer bright, slow SNe Ia than younger hosts. New results include that in our sample, the faintest and fastest SNe Ia occur only in galaxies exceeding a stellar mass threshhold of ~10^10 M_sun, indicating that their progenitors must arise in populations that are older and/or more metal rich than the general SN Ia population. A low host extinction sub-sample hints at a residual trend in peak luminosity with host…
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