The Dark Energy Survey : Detection of weak lensing magnification of supernovae and constraints on dark matter haloes
P.Shah, T.M.Davis, D.Bacon, J.Frieman, L.Galbany, R.Kessler, O.Lahav,, J.Lee, C.Lidman, R.C.Nichol, M.Sako, D.Scolnic, M.Sullivan, M.Vincenzi,, P.Wiseman, S.Allam, T.M.C.Abbott, M.Aguena, O.Alves, F.Andrade-Oliveira,, J.Annis, K.Bechtol, E.Bertin, S.Bocquet, D.Brooks, D.Brout

TL;DR
This paper reports the first high-significance detection of weak lensing magnification of supernovae, providing new constraints on dark matter halos and improving cosmological parameter estimates.
Contribution
It presents the first 6-sigma detection of supernova lensing magnification and introduces a method to reduce supernova distance scatter by accounting for environmental lensing effects.
Findings
Detected supernova lensing at 6.0 sigma significance.
Constrained dark matter halo mass-to-light ratios.
Revised cosmological parameters with de-lensed supernova data.
Abstract
The residuals of the distance moduli of Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) relative to a Hubble diagram fit contain information about the inhomogeneity of the universe, due to weak lensing magnification by foreground matter. By correlating the residuals of the Dark Energy Survey Year 5 SN Ia sample (DES-SN5YR) with extra-galactic foregrounds from the DES Y3 Gold catalog, we detect the presence of lensing at significance. This is the first detection with a significance level above . Constraints on the effective mass-to-light ratios and radial profiles of dark-matter haloes surrounding individual galaxies are also obtained. We show that the scatter of SNe Ia around the Hubble diagram is reduced by modifying the standardisation of the distance moduli to include an easily calculable de-lensing (i.e., environmental) term. We use the de-lensed distance moduli to recompute…
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