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GCN Circular 20751

Subject
LIGO/Virgo G275404 ANTARES search
Date
2017-02-26T14:13:51Z (7 years ago)
From
Damien Dornic at CPPM/CNRS <dornic@cppm.in2p3.fr>
M. Ageron (CPPM/CNRS), B. Baret (APC/CNRS), A. Coleiro (IFIC & APC), D. Dornic (CPPM/CNRS), A. Kouchner (APC/Universite Paris Diderot), T. Pradier (IPHC/Universite de Strasbourg) report on behalf of the ANTARES Collaboration:

Using on-line data from the ANTARES detector, we have performed a follow-up analysis of the recently reported LIGO/Virgo G275404 event using the initial LIGO skyprobcc_cWB probability map at event time (LVC GCN Circ. 20738). The ANTARES visibility at the time of the alert together with the 90% contour of the probability map are shown in: https://www.cppm.in2p3.fr/~dornic/events/G275404.png (gwantares/ANT@GW). Considering the location probability provided by the LIGO collaboration, there is a 45% chance that the GW emitter was in the ANTARES field of view.

No up-going muon neutrino candidate events were recorded within the 90% contour during a +/- 500s time-window centered on the G275404 event time. The expected number of atmospheric background events in the region visible by ANTARES is ~1.3e-3 in the +/- 500s time window. An extended search during +/- 1 hour gives no up-going neutrino coincidence.

An estimate of the upper limit on the associated neutrino fluence will be sent in a subsequent circular.

ANTARES, being installed in the Mediterranean Deep Sea, is the largest neutrino detector in the Northern Hemisphere.  It is primarily sensitive to astrophysical neutrinos in the TeV-PeV energy range.  At 10 TeV, the median angular resolution for muon neutrinos is below 0.5 degrees.  In the range 1-100 TeV, ANTARES has the best sensitivity to a large fraction of the Southern sky.
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