C. Saunders
University of California, Berkeley
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Featured researches published by C. Saunders.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
F. K. Röpke; M. Kromer; Ivo R. Seitenzahl; R. Pakmor; S. A. Sim; S. Taubenberger; F. Ciaraldi-Schoolmann; W. Hillebrandt; Gregory Scott Aldering; P. Antilogus; Charles Baltay; S. Benitez-Herrera; S. Bongard; C. Buton; A. Canto; F. Cellier-Holzem; M. Childress; N. Chotard; Y. Copin; H. K. Fakhouri; M. Fink; D. Fouchez; E. Gangler; J. Guy; S. Hachinger; E. Y. Hsiao; J. Chen; M. Kerschhaggl; M. Kowalski; P. Nugent
The nearby supernova SN 2011fe can be observed in unprecedented detail. Therefore, it is an important test case for Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) models, which may bring us closer to understanding the physical nature of these objects. Here, we explore how available and expected future observations of SN 2011fe can be used to constrain SN Ia explosion scenarios. We base our discussion on three-dimensional simulations of a delayed detonation in a Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarf and of a violent merger of two white dwarfs (WDs)—realizations of explosion models appropriate for two of the most widely discussed progenitor channels that may give rise to SNe Ia. Although both models have their shortcomings in reproducing details of the early and near-maximum spectra of SN 2011fe obtained by the Nearby Supernova Factory (SNfactory), the overall match with the observations is reasonable. The level of agreement is slightly better for the merger, in particular around maximum, but a clear preference for one model over the other is still not justified. Observations at late epochs, however, hold promise for discriminating the explosion scenarios in a straightforward way, as a nucleosynthesis effect leads to differences in the 55Co production. SN 2011fe is close enough to be followed sufficiently long to study this effect.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
K. Maguire; M. Sullivan; Y.-C. Pan; Avishay Gal-Yam; Isobel M. Hook; D. A. Howell; Peter E. Nugent; Paolo A. Mazzali; N. Chotard; Kelsey I. Clubb; A. V. Filippenko; Mansi M. Kasliwal; M. T. Kandrashoff; Dovi Poznanski; C. Saunders; Jeffrey M. Silverman; Emma S. Walker; Dong-Ling Xu
We present an investigation of the optical spectra of 264 low-redshift (z 40 per cent of SNe Ia observed at these phases show signs of unburnt material in their spectra, and that C II features are more likely to be found in SNe Ia having narrower light curves.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
D. Rubin; R. A. Knop; E. S. Rykoff; Gregory Scott Aldering; Rahman Amanullah; K. Barbary; M. S. Burns; A. Conley; Natalia Connolly; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; V. Fadeyev; H. K. Fakhouri; Andrew S. Fruchter; R. Gibbons; G. Goldhaber; Ariel Goobar; E. Y. Hsiao; X. Huang; M. Kowalski; C. Lidman; Joshua Meyers; J. Nordin; S. Perlmutter; C. Saunders; A. L. Spadafora; V. Stanishev; Nao Suzuki; and L. Wang
We report the discovery of a redshift 1.71 supernova in the GOODS-North field. The Hubble Space Telescope (HST) ACS spectrum has almost negligible contamination from the host or neighboring galaxies. Although the rest-frame-sampled range is too blue to include any Si II line, a principal component analysis allows us to confirm it as a Type Ia supernova with 92% confidence. A recent serendipitous archival HST WFC3 grism spectrum contributed a key element of the confirmation by giving a host-galaxy redshift of 1.713 +/- 0.007. In addition to being the most distant SN Ia with spectroscopic confirmation, this is the most distant Ia with a precision color measurement. We present the ACS WFC and NICMOS 2 photometry and ACS and WFC3 spectroscopy. Our derived supernova distance is in agreement with the prediction of CDM.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
D. Rubin; G. Aldering; K. Barbary; K. Boone; G. Chappell; M. Currie; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; P. Fagrelius; Andrew S. Fruchter; B. Hayden; C. Lidman; J. Nordin; S. Perlmutter; C. Saunders; C. Sofiatti
While recent supernova cosmology research has benefited from improved measurements, current analysis approaches are not statistically optimal and will prove insufficient for future surveys. This paper discusses the limitations of current supernova cosmological analyses in treating outliers, selection effects, shape- and color-standardization relations, unexplained dispersion, and heterogeneous observations. We present a new Bayesian framework, called UNITY (Unified Nonlinear Inference for Type-Ia cosmologY), that incorporates significant improvements in our ability to confront these effects. We apply the framework to real supernova observations and demonstrate smaller statistical and systematic uncertainties. We verify earlier results that SNe Ia require nonlinear shape and color standardizations, but we now include these nonlinear relations in a statistically well-justified way. This analysis was primarily performed blinded, in that the basic framework was first validated on simulated data before transitioning to real data. We also discuss possible extensions of the method.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2013
A. G. Kim; R. C. Thomas; Gregory Scott Aldering; P. Antilogus; Cecilia R. Aragon; S. Bailey; Charles Baltay; S. Bongard; C. Buton; A. Canto; F. Cellier-Holzem; M. Childress; N. Chotard; Y. Copin; H. K. Fakhouri; E. Gangler; J. Guy; M. Kerschhaggl; M. Kowalski; J. Nordin; P. Nugent; K. Paech; R. Pain; E. Pecontal; R. Pereira; S. Perlmutter; D. Rabinowitz; M. Rigault; K. Runge; C. Saunders
We present a novel class of models for Type Ia supernova time-evolving spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and absolute magnitudes: they are each modeled as stochastic functions described by Gaussian processes. The values of the SED and absolute magnitudes are defined through well-defined regression prescriptions, so that data directly inform the models. As a proof of concept, we implement a model for synthetic photometry built from the spectrophotometric time series from the Nearby Supernova Factory. Absolute magnitudes at peak B brightness are calibrated to 0.13 mag in the g band and to as low as 0.09 mag in the z = 0.25 blueshifted i band, where the dispersion includes contributions from measurement uncertainties and peculiar velocities. The methodology can be applied to spectrophotometric time series of supernovae that span a range of redshifts to simultaneously standardize supernovae together with fitting cosmological parameters.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2014
J. Nordin; D. Rubin; Johan Richard; E. S. Rykoff; G. Aldering; Rahman Amanullah; Hakim Atek; K. Barbary; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; H. K. Fakhouri; Andrew S. Fruchter; Ariel Goobar; Isobel M. Hook; E. Y. Hsiao; X. Huang; J.-P. Kneib; C. Lidman; J. Meyers; S. Perlmutter; C. Saunders; A. L. Spadafora; Nao Suzuki
Using three magnified Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) detected behind CLASH (Cluster Lensing and Supernovae with Hubble) clusters, we perform a first pilot study to see whether standardizable candles can be used to calibrate cluster mass maps created from strong lensing observations. Such calibrations will be crucial when next-generation Hubble Space Telescope cluster surveys (e.g. Frontier) provide magnification maps that will, in turn, form the basis for the exploration of the high-redshift Universe. We classify SNe using combined photometric and spectroscopic observations, finding two of the three to be clearly of Type Ia and the third probable. The SNe exhibit significant amplification, up to a factor of 1.7 at similar to 5 Sigma significance (SN-L2). We conducted this as a blind study to avoid fine-tuning of parameters, finding a mean amplification difference between SNe and the cluster lensing models of 0.09 +/- 0.09(stat) +/- 0.05(sys) mag. This impressive agreement suggests no tension between cluster mass models and high-redshift-standardized SNe Ia. However, the measured statistical dispersion of Sigma(mu) = 0.21 mag appeared large compared to the dispersion expected based on statistical uncertainties (0.14). Further work with the SN and cluster lensing models, post-unblinding, reduced the measured dispersion to Sigma(mu) = 0.12. An explicit choice should thus be made as to whether SNe are used unblinded to improve the model, or blinded to test the model. As the lensed SN samples grow larger, this technique will allow improved constraints on assumptions regarding e.g. the structure of the dark matter halo.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
C. Saunders; G. Aldering; P. Antilogus; Cecilia R. Aragon; S. Bailey; Charles Baltay; S. Bongard; C. Buton; A. Canto; F. Cellier-Holzem; M. Childress; N. Chotard; Y. Copin; H. K. Fakhouri; U. Feindt; E. Gangler; J. Guy; M. Kerschhaggl; A. G. Kim; M. Kowalski; J. Nordin; Peter E. Nugent; K. Paech; R. Pain; E. Pecontal; Rodrigo Augusto Santinelo Pereira; S. Perlmutter; D. Rabinowitz; M. Rigault; D. Rubin
We estimate systematic errors due to K-corrections in standard photometric analyses of high-redshift Type Ia supernovae. Errors due to K-correction occur when the spectral template model underlying the light curve fitter poorly represents the actual supernova spectral energy distribution, meaning that the distance modulus cannot be recovered accurately. In order to quantify this effect, synthetic photometry is performed on artificially redshifted spectrophotometric data from 119 low-redshift supernovae from the Nearby Supernova Factory, and the resulting light curves are fit with a conventional light curve fitter. We measure the variation in the standardized magnitude that would be fit for a given supernova if located at a range of redshifts and observed with various filter sets corresponding to current and future supernova surveys. We find significant variation in the measurements of the same supernovae placed at different redshifts regardless of filters used, which causes dispersion greater than ~0.05 mag for measurements of photometry using the Sloan-like filters and a bias that corresponds to a 0.03 shift in w when applied to an outside data set. To test the result of a shift in supernova population or environment at higher redshifts, we repeat our calculations with the addition of a reweighting of the supernovae as a function of redshift and find that this strongly affects the results and would have repercussions for cosmology. We discuss possible methods to reduce the contribution of the K-correction bias and uncertainty.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2018
D. Rubin; B. Hayden; X. Huang; G. Aldering; Rahman Amanullah; K. Barbary; K. Boone; Mark Brodwin; Se E. Deustua; S. Dixon; Peter R. M. Eisenhardt; Andrew S. Fruchter; Anthony H. Gonzalez; Ariel Goobar; Ravi R. Gupta; Isobel M. Hook; M. J. Jee; A. G. Kim; M. Kowalski; C. Lidman; Eric V. Linder; K. Luther; J. Nordin; R. Pain; S. Perlmutter; Z. Raha; M. Rigault; Pilar Ruiz-Lapuente; C. Saunders; C. Sofiatti
We present the discovery and measurements of a gravitationally lensed supernova (SN) behind the galaxy cluster MOO J1014+0038. Based on multi-band Hubble Space Telescope and Very Large Telescope (VLT) photometry and spectroscopy, we find a 99% probability that this SN is a SN Ia, and a 1% chance of a CC SN. Our typing algorithm combines the shape and color of the light curve with the expected rates of each SN type in the host galaxy. With a redshift of 2.2216, this is the highest redshift SN Ia discovered with a spectroscopic host-galaxy redshift. A further distinguishing feature is that the lensing cluster, at redshift 1.23, is the most distant to date to have an amplified SN. The SN lies in the middle of the color and light-curve shape distributions found at lower redshift, disfavoring strong evolution to z = 2.22. We estimate an amplification of 2.8+0.6-0.5 (1.10+-0.23 mag)---compatible with the value estimated from the weak-lensing-derived mass and the mass-concentration relation from LambdaCDM simulations---making it the most amplified SN Ia discovered behind a galaxy cluster.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
M. Roman; D. Hardin; M. Betoule; P. Astier; C. Balland; Richard S. Ellis; S. Fabbro; J. Guy; Isobel M. Hook; Dale Andrew Howell; C. Lidman; A. Mitra; A. Möller; Ana Mourao; J. Neveu; Nathalie Palanque-Delabrouille; C. J. Pritchet; Nicolas Regnault; V. Ruhlmann-Kleider; C. Saunders
We present a fully consistent catalog of local and global properties of host galaxies of 882 Type Ia supernov\ae\ (SNIa) that were selected based on their light-curve properties, spanning the redshift range
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
X. Huang; Z. Raha; G. Aldering; P. Antilogus; S. Bailey; Charles Baltay; K. Barbary; D. Baugh; K. Boone; S. Bongard; C. Buton; J. Chen; N. Chotard; Y. Copin; P. Fagrelius; H. K. Fakhouri; U. Feindt; D. Fouchez; E. Gangler; B. Hayden; W. Hillebrandt; A. G. Kim; M. Kowalski; P.-F. Leget; S. Lombardo; J. Nordin; R. Pain; E. Pecontal; Rodrigo Augusto Santinelo Pereira; S. Perlmutter
0.01 < z < 1.\text{}