Type Ia supernova Hubble diagram with near-infrared and optical observations
V. Stanishev, A. Goobar, R. Amanullah, B. Bassett, Y.T. Fantaye, P., Garnavich, R. Hlozek, J. Nordin, P.M. Okouma, L. Ostman, M. Sako, R. Scalzo,, M. Smith

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that near-infrared peak magnitudes of Type Ia supernovae can be accurately estimated with minimal observations, enhancing their use as standard candles for cosmology.
Contribution
We show that a single NIR observation near maximum light, combined with optical data, suffices to determine supernova peak magnitudes, extending the NIR Hubble diagram efficiently.
Findings
Single NIR template describes well-sampled light curves when stretched by optical parameters.
NIR Hubble residuals weakly correlate with optical decline and color.
Intrinsic NIR luminosity scatter is about 0.10 mag, smaller than optical.
Abstract
We main goal of this paper is to test whether the NIR peak magnitudes of SNe Ia could be accurately estimated with only a single observation obtained close to maximum light, provided the time of B band maximum and the optical stretch parameter are known. We obtained multi-epoch UBVRI and single-epoch J and H photometric observations of 16 SNe Ia in the redshift range z=0.037-0.183, doubling the leverage of the current SN Ia NIR Hubble diagram and the number of SNe beyond redshift 0.04. This sample was analyzed together with 102 NIR and 458 optical light curves (LCs) of normal SNe Ia from the literature. The analysis of 45 well-sampled NIR LCs shows that a single template accurately describes them if its time axis is stretched with the optical stretch parameter. This allows us to estimate the NIR peak magnitudes even with one observation obtained within 10 days from B-band maximum. We…
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