SALT3: An Improved Type Ia Supernova Model for Measuring Cosmic Distances
W. D. Kenworthy, D. O. Jones, M. Dai, R. Kessler, D. Scolnic, D., Brout, M. R. Siebert, J. D. R. Pierel, K. G. Dettman, G. Dimitriadis, R. J., Foley, S. W. Jha, Y.-C. Pan, A. Riess, S. Rodney, and C. Rojas-Bravo

TL;DR
SALT3 is an improved spectral-energy distribution model for Type Ia supernovae that enhances distance measurement accuracy and reduces uncertainties, aiding cosmological research.
Contribution
We developed SALT3, a new supernova model with better uncertainty estimation, extended wavelength range, and publicly available training tools, surpassing SALT2 in performance.
Findings
Reduced calibration uncertainties in the training sample.
Lowered Hubble scatter by 10-15% when including new photometric bands.
Insignificant systematic differences between low and high redshift SNe distances.
Abstract
A spectral-energy distribution (SED) model for Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) is a critical tool for measuring precise and accurate distances across a large redshift range and constraining cosmological parameters. We present an improved model framework, SALT3, which has several advantages over current models including the leading SALT2 model (SALT2.4). While SALT3 has a similar philosophy, it differs from SALT2 by having improved estimation of uncertainties, better separation of color and light-curve stretch, and a publicly available training code. We present the application of our training method on a cross-calibrated compilation of 1083 SNe with 1207 spectra. Our compilation is larger than the SALT2 training sample and has greatly reduced calibration uncertainties. The resulting trained SALT3.K21 model has an extended wavelength range - angstroms (1800 angstroms…
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