{Implications for the Hubble Constant from the First Seven Supernovae at Z 0.35}

Citation:

{Kim} A  G, {Gabi} S, {Goldhaber} G, {Groom} D  E, {Hook} I  M, {Kim} M  Y, {Lee} J  C, {Pennypacker} C  R, {Perlmutter} S, {Small} I  A, et al. {Implications for the Hubble Constant from the First Seven Supernovae at Z 0.35}. \apjl. 1997;476 :L63.

Date Published:

feb

Abstract:

{The Supernova Cosmology Project has discovered over 28 supernovae (SNs) at 0.35 łt} z łt} 0.65 in an ongoing program that uses Type Ia SNs (SN Ia's) as high-redshift distance indicators. Here we present measurements of the ratio between the locally observed and global Hubble constants, H$^{L}$₀/H$^{G}$₀ , based on the first seven SNs of this high-redshift data set compared with 18 SNs at z łt}= 0.1 from the Calan/Tololo survey. If Omega M łt}= 1, then light-curve width corrected SN magnitudes yield H$^{L}$₀/H$^{G}$₀ łt} 1.10 (95% confidence level) in both a Lamda = 0 and a flat universe. The analysis using the SN Ia's as standard candles without a light-curve width correction yields similar results. These results rule out the hypothesis that the discrepant ages of the Universe derived from globular clusters and recent measurements of the Hubble constant are attributable to a locally underdense bubble. Using the Cepheid-distance–calibrated absolute magnitudes for SN Ia's of Sandage et al., we can also measure the global Hubble constant, H$^{G}$₀ . If Omega M {\gt}= 0.2, we find that H$^{G}$₀ łt} 70 km s-1 Mpc-1 in a Lamda = 0 universe and H$^{G}$₀ łt} 78 km s-1 Mpc-1 in a flat universe, correcting the distant and local SN apparent magnitudes for light-curve width. Lower results for H$^{G}$₀ are obtained if the magnitudes are not width-corrected. }

Notes:

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