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The Astronomical Journal 116 (1998 September) 1009-1038   doi: 10.1086/300499

Observational Evidence from Supernovae for an Accelerating Universe and a Cosmological Constant


Adam G. Riess1, Alexei V. Filippenko1, Peter Challis2, Alejandro Clocchiatti3, Alan Diercks4, Peter M. Garnavich2, Ron L. Gilliland5, Craig J. Hogan4, Saurabh Jha2, Robert P. Kirshner2, B. Leibundgut6, M. M. Phillips7, David Reiss4, Brian P. Schmidt8,9, Robert A. Schommer7, R. Chris Smith7,10, J. Spyromilio6, Christopher Stubbs4, Nicholas B. Suntzeff7 and John Tonry11
1 Department of Astronomy, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley, CA 94720-3411
2 Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, 60 Garden Street, Cambridge, MA 02138
3 Departamento de Astronomía y Astrofísica, Pontificia Universidad Católica, Casilla 104, Santiago 22, Chile
4 Department of Astronomy, University of Washington, Box 351580, Seattle, WA 98195
5 Space Telescope Science Institute, 3700 San Martin Drive, Baltimore, MD 21218
6 European Southern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild-Strasse 2, D-85748 Garching bei München, Germany
7 Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, National Optical Astronomy Observatories, Casilla 603, La Serena, Chile. NOAO is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation
8 Mount Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatories, Private Bag, Weston Creek, ACT 2611, Australia
9 Visiting Astronomer, Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
10 Department of Astronomy, University of Michigan, 834 Dennison Building, Ann Arbor, MI 48109
11 Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii, 2680 Woodlawn Drive, Honolulu, HI 96822

ABSTRACT. We present spectral and photometric observations of 10 Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) in the redshift range 0.16 ≤ z ≤ 0.62. The luminosity distances of these objects are determined by methods that employ relations between SN Ia luminosity and light curve shape. Combined with previous data from our High-z Supernova Search Team and recent results by Riess et al., this expanded set of 16 high-redshift supernovae and a set of 34 nearby supernovae are used to place constraints on the following cosmological parameters: the Hubble constant (H0), the mass density (ΩM), the cosmological constant (i.e., the vacuum energy density, ΩΛ), the deceleration parameter (q0), and the dynamical age of the universe (t0). The distances of the high-redshift SNe Ia are, on average, 10%–15% farther than expected in a low mass density (ΩM = 0.2) universe without a cosmological constant. Different light curve fitting methods, SN Ia subsamples, and prior constraints unanimously favor eternally expanding models with positive cosmological constant (i.e., ΩΛ > 0) and a current acceleration of the expansion (i.e., q0 < 0). With no prior constraint on mass density other than ΩM ≥ 0, the spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia are statistically consistent with q0 < 0 at the 2.8 σ and 3.9 σ confidence levels, and with ΩΛ > 0 at the 3.0 σ and 4.0 σ confidence levels, for two different fitting methods, respectively. Fixing a "minimal" mass density, ΩM = 0.2, results in the weakest detection, ΩΛ > 0 at the 3.0 σ confidence level from one of the two methods. For a flat universe prior (ΩM + ΩΛ = 1), the spectroscopically confirmed SNe Ia require ΩΛ > 0 at 7 σ and 9 σ formal statistical significance for the two different fitting methods. A universe closed by ordinary matter (i.e., ΩM = 1) is formally ruled out at the 7 σ to 8 σ confidence level for the two different fitting methods. We estimate the dynamical age of the universe to be 14.2 ± 1.7 Gyr including systematic uncertainties in the current Cepheid distance scale. We estimate the likely effect of several sources of systematic error, including progenitor and metallicity evolution, extinction, sample selection bias, local perturbations in the expansion rate, gravitational lensing, and sample contamination. Presently, none of these effects appear to reconcile the data with ΩΛ = 0 and q0 ≥ 0.

Key words: cosmology: observations; supernovae: general

Print publication: Issue 3 (1998 September)
Received 13 March 1998, accepted for publication 6 May 1998

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