GCN Circular 26563
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: No significant candidates found in Pan-STARRS observations
Event
Date
2019-12-22T21:46:21Z (6 years ago)
From
O. McBrien at QUB <omcbrien02@qub.ac.uk>
O. McBrien, S. J. Smartt, K. W. Smith, D. R. Young, J. Gillanders. S. Srivastav, P. Clark, D. O'Neill, M. Fulton (QUB), K.C. Chambers , M. E. Huber, A.S.B. Schultz, T. de Boer, J. Bulger, J. Fairlamb, C.C. Lin, T. Lowe, E. Magnier , R. J. Wainscoat, M. Willman (IfA, Univ. Hawaii), A. Rest (STScI), C. Stubbs (Harvard), T.-W. Chen (Stockholm) on behalf of the Pan-STARRS collaboration report:
We have surveyed the sky localisation region of the gravitational wave event S191216ap (The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration, GCN 26454) with Pan-STARRS1 (Chambers et al. 2016, arXiv:1612.05560), according to the most recently available skymap (LALInference.fits.gz, GCN 26505), and find 15 transient objects within the 90% probability contour. Our survey covers 58.8% of this contour���s area.
Our coverage began on MJD 58834.210 (UTC 2019-12-17 05:01:45), though poor weather limited observing time severely on this night. Observations continued over the following 3 subsequent nights, all comprised of 45 second tiling exposures in the PS1-r band.
Of the 15 objects found, 8 are known objects already registered on the Transient Name Server. For the remaining 7 objects, 6 appear to be supernova-like events, with relatively flat lightcurves and a host visible in the exposures, while 1 is an M-dwarf flare. We discuss these 7 new objects below:
PS19him (AT2019xfh) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:22:43.25, Dec=+08:47:04.9 and magnitude 19.10 +/- 0.09 on MJD 58836.233 in the PS1-r band. PS19him is associated with the galaxy SDSS J212243.21+084705.7 at a photometric redshift of 0.117 +/- 0.034. The object was detected on the subsequent night at a similar magnitude. The flatness of the lightcurve suggests this is a supernova.
PS19hir (AT2019xfj