Progenitor age is the primary physical driver of the host-mass and host-sSFR magnitude steps in Type Ia supernovae, with the mass step eliminated by direct age correction.
Environmental Dependence of Type Ia Supernova Luminosities from a Sample without a Local-Global Difference in Host Star Formation
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
It is now established that there is a dependence of the luminosity of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) on environment: SNe Ia in young, star-forming, metal-poor stellar populations appear fainter after light-curve shape corrections than those in older, passive, metal-rich environments. This is accounted for in cosmological studies using a global property of the SN host galaxy, typically the host galaxy stellar mass. However, recent low-redshift studies suggest that this effect manifests itself most strongly when using the local star-formation rate (SFR) at the SN location, rather than the global SFR or stellar mass of the host galaxy. At high-redshift, such local SFRs are difficult to determine; here, we show that an equivalent 'local' correction can be made by restricting the SN Ia sample in globally star-forming host galaxies to a low-mass host galaxy subset ($\le10^{10} M_{\odot}$). Comparing this sample of SNe Ia (in locally star-forming environments) to those in locally passive host galaxies, we find that SNe Ia in locally star-forming environments are $0.081\pm0.018$ mag fainter ($4.5\sigma$), consistent with the result reported by Rigault et al. (2015), but our conclusion is based on a sample ~5 times larger over a wider redshift range. This is a larger difference than when splitting the SN Ia sample based on global host galaxy SFR or host galaxy stellar mass. This method can be used in ongoing and future high-redshift SN surveys, where local SN Ia environments are difficult to determine.
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2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
The progenitor-age bias correction for SN Ia cosmology is robust to host-progenitor age mapping uncertainties from different delay-time distributions, leaving the redshift-dependent magnitude correction and cosmological impact largely unchanged.
citing papers explorer
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Strong Progenitor Age Bias in Supernova Cosmology. III. Progenitor Age as the Physical Origin of the Type Ia Supernova Magnitude Steps with Host Properties
Progenitor age is the primary physical driver of the host-mass and host-sSFR magnitude steps in Type Ia supernovae, with the mass step eliminated by direct age correction.
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Still non-accelerating: age-bias correction in supernova cosmology is robust to host-progenitor age mapping
The progenitor-age bias correction for SN Ia cosmology is robust to host-progenitor age mapping uncertainties from different delay-time distributions, leaving the redshift-dependent magnitude correction and cosmological impact largely unchanged.