TY - JOUR
T1 - The high-Z supernova search
T2 - Measuring cosmic deceleration and global curvature of the universe using type Ia supernovae
AU - Schmidt, Brian P.
AU - Suntzeff, Nicholas B.
AU - Phillips, M. M.
AU - Schommer, Robert A.
AU - Clocchiatti, Alejandro
AU - Kirshner, Robert P.
AU - Garnavich, Peter
AU - Challis, Peter
AU - Leibundgut, B.
AU - Spyromilio, J.
AU - Riess, Adam G.
AU - Filippenko, Alexei V.
AU - Hamuy, Mario
AU - Chris Smith, R.
AU - Hogan, Craig
AU - Stubbs, Christopher
AU - Diercks, Alan
AU - Reiss, David
AU - Gilliland, Ron
AU - Tonry, John
AU - Maza, José
AU - Dressler, A.
AU - Walsh, J.
AU - Ciardullo, R.
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - The High-Z Supernova Search is an international collaboration to discover and monitor Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) at z > 0.2 with the aim of measuring cosmic deceleration and global curvature. Our collaboration has pursued a basic understanding of supernovae in the nearby universe, discovering and observing a large sample of objects and developing methods to measure accurate distances with SNe Ia. This paper describes the extension of this program to z ≥ 0.2, outlining our search techniques and follow-up program. We have devised high-throughput filters that provide accurate two-color rest frame B and V light curves of SNe Ia, enabling us to produce precise, extinction-corrected luminosity distances in the range 0.25 < z < 0.55. Sources of systematic error from K-corrections, extinction, selection effects, and evolution are investigated, and their effects estimated. We present photometric and spectral observations of SN 1995K, our program's first supernova (SN), and use the data to obtain a precise measurement of the luminosity distance to the z = 0.479 host galaxy. This object, when combined with a nearby sample of SNe, yields an estimate for the matter density of the universe of ΩM = -0.2-0.8+1.0 if ΩA = 0. For a spatially flat universe composed of normal matter and a cosmological constant, we find ΩM = 0.4-0.4+0.5, ΩA = 0.6-0.5+0.4. We demonstrate that with a sample of ∼ 30 objects, we should be able to determine relative luminosity distances over the range 0 < z < 0.5 with sufficient precision to measure ΩM with an uncertainty of ±0.2.
AB - The High-Z Supernova Search is an international collaboration to discover and monitor Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) at z > 0.2 with the aim of measuring cosmic deceleration and global curvature. Our collaboration has pursued a basic understanding of supernovae in the nearby universe, discovering and observing a large sample of objects and developing methods to measure accurate distances with SNe Ia. This paper describes the extension of this program to z ≥ 0.2, outlining our search techniques and follow-up program. We have devised high-throughput filters that provide accurate two-color rest frame B and V light curves of SNe Ia, enabling us to produce precise, extinction-corrected luminosity distances in the range 0.25 < z < 0.55. Sources of systematic error from K-corrections, extinction, selection effects, and evolution are investigated, and their effects estimated. We present photometric and spectral observations of SN 1995K, our program's first supernova (SN), and use the data to obtain a precise measurement of the luminosity distance to the z = 0.479 host galaxy. This object, when combined with a nearby sample of SNe, yields an estimate for the matter density of the universe of ΩM = -0.2-0.8+1.0 if ΩA = 0. For a spatially flat universe composed of normal matter and a cosmological constant, we find ΩM = 0.4-0.4+0.5, ΩA = 0.6-0.5+0.4. We demonstrate that with a sample of ∼ 30 objects, we should be able to determine relative luminosity distances over the range 0 < z < 0.5 with sufficient precision to measure ΩM with an uncertainty of ±0.2.
KW - Cosmology: Observations
KW - Galaxies: Distances and redshifts
KW - Supernovae: General
KW - Supernovae: Individual (SN 1995K)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=22444455191&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1086/306308
DO - 10.1086/306308
M3 - Article
SN - 0004-637X
VL - 507
SP - 46
EP - 63
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
IS - 1 PART I
ER -