The ESO's VLT Type Ia supernova spectral set of the final two years of SNLS
C. Balland, F. Cellier-Holzem, C. Lidman, P. Astier, M. Betoule, R. G., Carlberg, A. Conley, R. S. Ellis, J. Guy, D. Hardin, I. M. Hook, D. A., Howell, R. Pain, C. J. Pritchet, N. Regnault, M. Sullivan, V. Arsenijevic, S., Baumont, P. El-Hage, S. Fabbro, D. Fouchez, A. Mitra

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive spectral analysis of 68 high-redshift Type Ia supernovae observed with ESO's VLT during the final two years of SNLS, investigating spectral evolution, properties, and potential new standardization parameters.
Contribution
It provides a large, high-quality spectral dataset of high-redshift SNeIa and explores spectral differences with low-redshift samples, including potential new indicators like UV flux for cosmology.
Findings
High-z SNeIa are bluer and brighter than low-z counterparts.
Detected a flux excess in UV range for SNeIa in low-mass host galaxies.
High-z SNeIa show weaker intermediate mass element absorption lines.
Abstract
We aim to present 70 spectra of 68 new high-redshift type Ia supernovae (SNeIa) measured at ESO's VLT during the final two years of operation (2006-2008) of the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS). We use the full five year SNLS VLT spectral set to investigate a possible spectral evolution of SNeIa populations with redshift and study spectral properties as a function of lightcurve fit parameters and the mass of the host-galaxy. Reduction and extraction are based on both IRAF standard tasks and our own reduction pipeline. Redshifts are estimated from host-galaxy lines whenever possible or alternatively from supernova features. We used the spectrophotometric SNIa model SALT2 combined with a set of galaxy templates that model the host-galaxy contamination to assess the type Ia nature of the candidates. We identify 68 new SNeIa with redshift ranging from z=0.207 to z=0.98 (<z>=0.62). Each…
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