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Main Authors: Ramaiya, S., Jarvis, M. J., Vincenzi, M., Sullivan, M., Whittam, I. H.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27988
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author Ramaiya, S.
Jarvis, M. J.
Vincenzi, M.
Sullivan, M.
Whittam, I. H.
author_facet Ramaiya, S.
Jarvis, M. J.
Vincenzi, M.
Sullivan, M.
Whittam, I. H.
contents Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) standardisation parameters exhibit evidence for systematic variation across the host galaxy star-formation rate - stellar mass (SFR$-M_\star$) plane, motivating the incorporation of galaxy SFR information in cosmological inference. SFRs are commonly estimated via spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting with far-infrared (FIR) measurements to account for dust-obscured star formation. Such FIR coverage will, however, be limited for upcoming time-domain surveys such as the Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), necessitating the use of alternative SFR tracers. Here, we reconstruct the SFR - $M_\star$ plane using 1.4 GHz diagnostics, to test the consistency of host classifications against FIR-constrained SED-based estimates. Within this plane, SN Ia host galaxies are divided into three regions: Region 1 (low-mass), Region 2 (high-mass star-forming) and Region 3 (high-mass passive). We find that ${\sim}84$ per cent of SN hosts retain identical region assignments when using radio versus FIR-constrained SED-derived SFRs. Measuring SN Ia nuisance parameters ($α,β, M$) within each subregion, we find consistent values between the two SFR - $M_\star$ plane reconstructions, indicating limited sensitivity to SFR estimator choice, with the largest deviations in Region 3 at ${\sim}1.1σ$. Across the three 1.4 GHz SFR - $M_\star$ subregions, we confirm the region-dependent variation in SN Ia standardisation parameters - particularly $β$ - reported in our earlier SED-based analysis. With near-complete radio coverage of the LSST footprint anticipated from current and forthcoming radio continuum surveys (e.g., Square Kilometre Array), radio SFR calibrations will become an increasingly useful and scalable approach to host galaxy classification, supporting the construction of robust SN Ia subsamples for precision cosmology.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2604_27988
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Applications of 1.4 GHz diagnostics to Type Ia Supernova host galaxies
Ramaiya, S.
Jarvis, M. J.
Vincenzi, M.
Sullivan, M.
Whittam, I. H.
Astrophysics of Galaxies
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) standardisation parameters exhibit evidence for systematic variation across the host galaxy star-formation rate - stellar mass (SFR$-M_\star$) plane, motivating the incorporation of galaxy SFR information in cosmological inference. SFRs are commonly estimated via spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting with far-infrared (FIR) measurements to account for dust-obscured star formation. Such FIR coverage will, however, be limited for upcoming time-domain surveys such as the Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), necessitating the use of alternative SFR tracers. Here, we reconstruct the SFR - $M_\star$ plane using 1.4 GHz diagnostics, to test the consistency of host classifications against FIR-constrained SED-based estimates. Within this plane, SN Ia host galaxies are divided into three regions: Region 1 (low-mass), Region 2 (high-mass star-forming) and Region 3 (high-mass passive). We find that ${\sim}84$ per cent of SN hosts retain identical region assignments when using radio versus FIR-constrained SED-derived SFRs. Measuring SN Ia nuisance parameters ($α,β, M$) within each subregion, we find consistent values between the two SFR - $M_\star$ plane reconstructions, indicating limited sensitivity to SFR estimator choice, with the largest deviations in Region 3 at ${\sim}1.1σ$. Across the three 1.4 GHz SFR - $M_\star$ subregions, we confirm the region-dependent variation in SN Ia standardisation parameters - particularly $β$ - reported in our earlier SED-based analysis. With near-complete radio coverage of the LSST footprint anticipated from current and forthcoming radio continuum surveys (e.g., Square Kilometre Array), radio SFR calibrations will become an increasingly useful and scalable approach to host galaxy classification, supporting the construction of robust SN Ia subsamples for precision cosmology.
title Applications of 1.4 GHz diagnostics to Type Ia Supernova host galaxies
topic Astrophysics of Galaxies
Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2604.27988