It is well established that the Hubble residuals of type Ia supernovae (SNe
Ia) show the luminosity step with respect to their host galaxy stellar masses.
This `mass-step' is taken as an additional correction factor for the SN Ia
luminosity standardization. Here we investigate the root cause of the mass-step
and propose that the bimodal nature of the host age distribution is
responsible for the step. In particular, by using the empirical nonlinear
mass-to-age relation of local galaxies, we convert the mass function of SN Ia
hosts to their age distribution. We find that the age distribution shows clear
bimodality: a younger (< 6 Gyr) group with lower mass (∼109.5Msun​) and an older (> 6 Gyr) group with higher mass (∼1010.5Msun​). On the Hubble residual versus host mass plane,
the two groups create the mass-step at ∼1010Msun​. This
leads us to conclude that the host galaxy mass-step can be attributed to the
bimodal age distribution in relation to a nonlinear relation between galaxy
mass and age. We suggest that the mass-step is another manifestation of the old
`red sequence' and the young `blue cloud' observed in the galactic
color--magnitude diagram.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl