Hubble Space Telescope Observations of Mira Variables in the Type Ia Supernova Host NGC 1559: An Alternative Candle to Measure the Hubble Constant
Caroline D. Huang, Adam G. Riess, Wenlong Yuan, Lucas M. Macri, Nadia, L. Zakamska, Stefano Casertano, Patricia A. Whitelock, Samantha L. Hoffmann,, Alexei V. Filippenko, and Daniel Scolnic

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared Hubble observations to identify Mira variables in NGC 1559, calibrate Type Ia supernova luminosity, and measure the Hubble constant, offering an alternative to Cepheid-based methods with promising precision improvements.
Contribution
First calibration of SN Ia luminosity using Mira variables in a supernova host galaxy, providing an independent method to measure the Hubble constant.
Findings
Measured distance modulus for NGC 1559 as 31.41 mag
Derived Hubble constant as approximately 73 km/s/Mpc
Achieved a potential reduction in H0 measurement error to ~3%
Abstract
We present year-long, near-infrared Hubble Space Telescope WFC3 observations used to search for Mira variables in NGC 1559, the host galaxy of the Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) 2005df. This is the first dedicated search for Miras, highly-evolved low-mass stars, in a SN Ia host and subsequently the first calibration of the SN Ia luminosity using Miras in a role historically played by Cepheids. We identify a sample of 115 O-rich Miras with P < 400 days based on their light curve properties. We find that the scatter in the Mira Period-Luminosity Relation (PLR) is comparable to Cepheid PLRs seen in SN Ia supernova host galaxies. Using a sample of O-rich Miras discovered in NGC 4258 with HST F160W and its maser distance, we measure a distance modulus for NGC 1559 of mu1559 = 31.41 +/- 0.050 (statistical) +/- 0.060 (systematic) mag. Based on the light curve of the normal, well-observed,…
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