GCN Circular 24283
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S190426c: Optical Wide-field Search with the Zwicky Transient Facility
Event
Date
2019-04-27T14:30:40Z (6 years ago)
From
Mansi M. Kasliwal at Caltech/Carnegie <mansikasliwal@gmail.com>
Michael W. Coughlin (Caltech), Mansi M. Kasliwal (Caltech), Daniel A.
Perley (LJMU), Ariel Goobar (OKC), Leo P. Singer (NASA GSFC), Shreya Anand
(Caltech), Tomas Ahumada (UMD), Igor Andreoni (Caltech), Eric C. Bellm
(UW), K. De (Caltech), R. Biswas (OKC), S. Nissanke (UvA), Dmitry Duev
(Caltech), S. Bradley Cenko (NASA GSFC), D. Goldstein (Caltech), A. Ho
(Caltech), V. Bhalerao (IITB), H. Kumar (IITB), V. Karambelkar (IITB), K.
Deshmukh (IITB), D. Saraogi (IITB), G. C. Anupama (IIA), C. Copperwheat
(LJMU), Virginia Cunningham (UMD), Shaon Ghosh (UWM), David Kaplan (UWM),
Jesper Sollerman (OKC), Joshua S. Bloom (UCB), M. Bulla (OKC), Matthew
Graham (Caltech), L. Yan (Caltech), C. Fremling (Caltech), Pradip Gatkine
(UMD), A. Miller (Northwestern)
On behalf of the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and Global Relay of
Observatories Watching Transients Happen (GROWTH) collaborations
We observed the localization region of the gravitational wave trigger
S190426c (GCN 24237) with the Palomar 48-inch telescope equipped with the
47 square degree ZTF camera (Bellm et al. 2019, Graham et al. 2019). A new
tiling was automatically optimally determined and triggered using the
GROWTH Target of Opportunity marshal (Coughlin et al. 2019a, Kasliwal et
al. 2019b). We started obtaining target-of-opportunity observations in the
g-band and r-band filters beginning at UT 2019-04-27 05:45. The projected
enclosed probability with the original sky map was 75%. However, with the
new sky map (GCN 24277, GCN 24279