Near-infrared observations of type Ia supernovae: The best known standard candle for cosmology
R. L. Barone-Nugent, C. Lidman, J. S. B. Wyithe, J. Mould, D. A., Howell, I. M. Hook, M. Sullivan, P. E. Nugent, I. Arcavi, S. B. Cenko, J., Cooke, A. Gal-Yam, E. Y. Hsiao, M. M. Kasliwal, K. Maguire, E. Ofek, D., Poznanski, D. Xu

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that near-infrared observations of Type Ia supernovae provide highly precise standard candles with minimal scatter, improving cosmological distance measurements and expanding opportunities for understanding the universe's expansion.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed analysis of NIR light curves for a sample of SNe Ia, showing their potential as the most reliable standard candles for cosmology.
Findings
H-band scatter is the smallest measured for SNe Ia.
Distances can be measured with 6% accuracy using minimal NIR data.
Strong correlation between J-band residuals and J-H pseudo-colour.
Abstract
We present an analysis of the Hubble diagram for 12 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) observed in the near-infrared J and H bands. We select SNe exclusively from the redshift range 0.03 < z < 0.09 to reduce uncertainties coming from peculiar velocities while remaining in a cosmologically well-understood region. All of the SNe in our sample exhibit no spectral or B-band light-curve peculiarities and lie in the B-band stretch range of 0.8-1.15. Our results suggest that SNe Ia observed in the near-infrared (NIR) are the best known standard candles. We fit previously determined NIR light-curve templates to new high-precision data to derive peak magnitudes and to determine the scatter about the Hubble line. Photometry of the 12 SNe is presented in the natural system. Using a standard cosmology of (H_0, Omega_m, Lambda) = (70,0.27,0.73) we find a median J-band absolute magnitude of M_J = -18.39…
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