The Carnegie Supernova Project-I: Correlation Between Type Ia Supernovae and Their Host Galaxies from Optical to Near-Infrared Bands
Syed A. Uddin, Christopher R. Burns, M. M. Phillips, Nicholas B., Suntzeff, Carlos Contreras, Eric Y. Hsiao, Nidia Morrell, Llu\'is Galbany,, Maximilian Stritzinger, Peter Hoeflich, Chris Ashall, Anthony L. Piro, Wendy, L. Freedman, S. E. Persson, Kevin Krisciunas, Peter Brown

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between Type Ia supernovae luminosity and their host galaxy properties across optical and near-infrared bands, revealing a consistent correlation with host galaxy mass and implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It is the first to analyze the correlation between SN~Ia luminosity and host galaxy mass across multiple bands, including near-infrared, and examines the impact of SN location within hosts on luminosity dispersion.
Findings
SNe~Ia are more luminous in more massive host galaxies.
The luminosity-host mass relation is negative across all bands.
SNe~Ia beyond 10 kpc from host centers show reduced luminosity dispersion.
Abstract
We present optical and near-infrared () photometry of host galaxies of Type Ia supernovae (SN~Ia) observed by the \textit{Carnegie Supernova Project-I}. We determine host galaxy stellar masses and, for the first time, study their correlation with SN~Ia standardized luminosity across optical and near-infrared () bands. In the individual bands, we find that SNe~Ia are more luminous in more massive hosts with luminosity offsets ranging between mag to mag after light-curve standardization. The slope of the SN~Ia Hubble residual-host mass relation is negative across all bands with values ranging between mag/dex to mag/dex -- implying that SNe~Ia in more massive galaxies are brighter than expected. The near-constant observed correlations across optical and near-infrared bands indicate that dust…
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