The Pantheon+ Analysis: Cosmological Constraints
Dillon Brout, Dan Scolnic, Brodie Popovic, Adam G. Riess, Joe Zuntz,, Rick Kessler, Anthony Carr, Tamara M. Davis, Samuel Hinton, David Jones, W., D'Arcy Kenworthy, Erik R. Peterson, Khaled Said, Georgie Taylor, Noor Ali,, Patrick Armstrong, Pranav Charvu, Arianna Dwomoh

TL;DR
The Pantheon+ analysis provides improved cosmological constraints using a large sample of Type Ia supernovae, refining measurements of dark energy, Hubble constant, and addressing systematic uncertainties in the context of the Hubble tension.
Contribution
This work significantly enhances the Pantheon analysis by increasing sample size, redshift range, and systematic treatment, leading to more precise cosmological parameter constraints.
Findings
Omega_M=0.334±0.018 in flat ΛCDM
w_0=-0.90±0.14 in flat w_0CDM
H_0=73.5±1.1 km/s/Mpc with SH0ES
Abstract
We present constraints on cosmological parameters from the Pantheon+ analysis of 1701 light curves of 1550 distinct Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) ranging in redshift from to 2.26. This work features an increased sample size, increased redshift span, and improved treatment of systematic uncertainties in comparison to the original Pantheon analysis and results in a factor of two improvement in cosmological constraining power. For a FlatCDM model, we find from SNe Ia alone. For a FlatCDM model, we measure from SNe Ia alone, H km s Mpc when including the Cepheid host distances and covariance (SH0ES), and when combining the SN likelihood with constraints from the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO); both values are consistent…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsCosmology and Gravitation Theories · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life · History and Developments in Astronomy
