Kairos said:
thank you for the length of the radius of Hubble!
but I saw many distance-redshift plots for supernovae (such as this one :
http://inspirehep.net/record/824150/plots) with µ largely exceeding 43..
This would mean that these supernovae are very close to the limit of observability?
The Hubble Radius is defined as the ratio of the velocity of light (
c), to the value of the Hubble constant (H
0). This gives the distance from the observer at which the recession velocity of a galaxy would equal the speed of light. Therefore, any object with a µ > 43.129 must not have the absolute magnitude they have previously determined.
The problem, I suspect, is their assumption that only Type Ia SNe are visible at distances of z > ~1, and they are using Type Ia SNe as their "standard candle." In 2008, when the paper you posted was written, that was the correct assumption. We knew that super-Chandrasekhar Type Ia SNe have existed since 2003, and they have a greater absolute magnitude than Chandrasekhar Type Ia SNe, but incorporating super-Chandrasekhar Type Ia SNe would appear closer than they are actually. What the authors of the paper could not have known is that we have since discovered sub-Chandrasekhar Type Ia SNe which vary in absolute magnitude between -14.2 and -18.9.
Therefore, if they detect a SN with an apparent magnitude of +28.7 and a redshift z > ~1, it would have been natural form them to assume it was a standard Chandrasekhar Type Ia SNe with an absolute magnitude of -19.3. That would give them a µ of 48. However, if that supernova was a sub-Chandrasekhar Type Ia SNe (a.k.a. Type Iax SNe), then the absolute magnitude would be substantially less, and therefore have a smaller distance modulus. Since the new classification of Type Iax SNe was not established before 2013, there is no way the authors of the paper could have filtered out the "contaminated" data.
See:
Type Iax Supernovae: A New Class of Stellar Explosion - The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 767, Number 1 (2013)
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