The Distance to NGC 1316 (Fornax A) From Observations of Four Type Ia Supernovae
Maximilian Stritzinger, Chris Burns, Mark Phillips, Gaston Folatelli,, Kevin Krisciunas, Eric Persson, Luis Boldt, Abdo Campillay, Carlos Contreras,, Wojtek Krzeminski, Francisco Salgado, Wendy Freedman, Mario Hamuy, Barry, Madore, Miguel Roth, Nicholas Suntzeff

TL;DR
This study uses multiple Type Ia supernova observations in NGC 1316 to estimate its distance, confirming the reliability of supernovae as distance indicators while highlighting issues with fast-declining supernovae.
Contribution
It provides a precise distance measurement to NGC 1316 using several normal Type Ia supernovae and evaluates the consistency of different methods, also questioning the use of fast-declining supernovae for distance estimation.
Findings
Distance to NGC 1316 is 17.8 Mpc with 5% precision.
Normal SNe Ia methods yield consistent distance estimates within 3%.
Fast-declining SN 2006mr gives larger, inconsistent distances.
Abstract
The giant elliptical galaxy NGC 1316 (Fornax A) is a well-studied member of the Fornax Cluster and a prolific producer of Type Ia supernovae, having hosted four observed events since 1980. Here we present detailed optical and near-infrared light curves of the spectroscopically normal SN 2006dd. These data are used, along with previously published photometry of the normal SN 1980N and SN 1981D, and the fast-declining, low-luminosity SN 2006mr, to compute independent estimates of the host reddening for each supernova, and the distance to NGC 1316. From the three normal supernovae, we find a distance of 17.8 +/- 0.3 (random) +/- 0.3 (systematic) Mpc for Ho = 72. Distance moduli derived from the "EBV" and Tripp methods give values that are mutually consistent to 4 -- 8%. Moreover, the weighted means of the distance moduli for these three SNe for three methods agree to within 3%. This…
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