scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Cosmological parameters from lensed supernovae

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors investigate the possibility of measuring the Hubble constant, the fractional energy density components and the equation of state parameter of the ''dark energy'' using lensed multiple images of high-redshift supernovae.
Abstract
We investigate the possibility of measuring the Hubble constant, the fractional energy density components and the equation of state parameter of the ``dark energy'' using lensed multiple images of high-redshift supernovae. With future instruments, such as the SNAP and NGST satellites, it will become possible to observe several hundred lensed core-collapse supernovae with multiple images. Accurate measurements of the image separation, flux-ratio, time-delay and lensing foreground galaxy will provide complementary information to the cosmological tests based on, e.g., the magnitude-redshift relation of Type Ia supernovae, especially with regards to the Hubble parameter that could be measured with a statistical uncertainty at the one percent level. Assuming a flat universe, the statistical uncertainty on the mass density is found to be sigma^stat_m <0.05. However, systematic effects from the uncertainty of the lens modeling are likely to dominate. E.g., if the lensing galaxies are extremely compact but are (erroneously) modeled as singular isothermal spheres, the mass density is biased by sigma^syst_m =0.1. We argue that wide-field near-IR instruments such as the one proposed for the SNAP mission are critical for collecting large statistics of lensed supernovae.

read more

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

The expansion of the universe observed with supernovae

TL;DR: The major supernova cosmology surveys, the presented analyses and their conclusions, together with the present status of the field are described, and the expectations for the near future are concluded.
Peer Review

Strong gravitational lensing and microlensing of supernovae

TL;DR: In this article , the authors describe the use of the time delays between multiple supernovae (SNe) images as a way to measure cosmological distances and thus constrain cosmology parameters, particularly the Hubble constant.
Related Papers (5)