Confirmation of a Star Formation Bias in Type Ia Supernova Distances and its Effect on Measurement of the Hubble Constant
M. Rigault, G. Aldering, M. Kowalski, Y. Copin, P. Antilogus, C., Aragon, S. Bailey, C. Baltay, D. Baugh, S. Bongard, K. Boone, C. Buton, J., Chen, N. Chotard, H. K. Fakhouri, U. Feindt, P. Fagrelius, M. Fleury, D., Fouchez, E. Gangler, B. Hayden, A. G. Kim, P.-F. Leget

TL;DR
This study confirms that Type Ia supernovae in star-forming regions are dimmer than those in passive environments, which biases Hubble constant measurements; correcting this bias aligns local and cosmological estimates.
Contribution
It provides independent confirmation of the star formation bias in Type Ia supernovae and quantifies its impact on Hubble constant measurements.
Findings
Star-forming environments cause SNe Ia to appear dimmer by ~0.1 mag.
Correcting for environment bias adjusts H_0 to values consistent with CMB measurements.
The bias affects local H_0 measurements derived from SNe Ia.
Abstract
Previously we used the Nearby Supernova Factory sample to show that SNe~Ia having locally star-forming environments are dimmer than SNe~Ia having locally passive environments.Here we use the \constitution\ sample together with host galaxy data from \GALEX\ to independently confirm that result. The effect is seen using both the SALT2 and MLCS2k2 lightcurve fitting and standardization methods, with brightness differences of for SALT2 and for MLCS2k2 with . When combined with our previous measurement the effect is for SALT2. If the ratio of these local SN~Ia environments changes with redshift or sample selection, this can lead to a bias in cosmological measurements. We explore this issue further, using as an example the direct measurement of . \GALEX{} observations show that the…
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