In graduate school at the University of Arizona at the Steward Observatory working with Professor Phil Pinto, he changed his focus to the study of core collapse supernovae, in particular using Type II supernovae to measure geometric distances using the expanding photosphere method (EPM).[10] With Pinto, he invented a semi-empirical method to measure distances to Type II events, called the Standard Candle method,[11] which improved the distance accuracies over EPM.
↑Phillips, M. M. 1993, Astrophysical Journal Letters",413, 105
↑Hamuy, M. et al. 1993, Astronomical Journal, 106, 2392
↑Suntzeff, N.B. et al. 1999, Astronomical Journal, 119, 1175
↑Freedman, W. et al. 2001, Astrophysical Journal, 553, 47
↑Riess, A. et al. 1998, Astronomical Journal, 119, 1009; Schmidt, B. P., et al. 1998, Astrophysical Journal, 507, 46; see also Perlmutter, S. et al. 1999, Astrophysical Journal, 517, 565
↑Hamuy, M., et al. 2001, Astrophysical Journal, 558, 615
↑Hamuy, M., & Pinto, P. A. 2002, Astrophysical Journal Letters, 566, L63