Skip to main content
Circulars over Kafka event name backfill. See news and announcements

GCN Circular 40221

Subject
LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA S250328ae: Subaru/PFS Spectroscopic Follow up and Candidates
Date
2025-04-24T05:12:11Z (2 days ago)
From
Haibin Zhang at National Astronomical Observatory of Japan (NAOJ) <haibin.zhang@nao.ac.jp>
Via
Web form

Haibin Zhang, Mitsuru Kokubo, Nozomu Tominaga, Yousuke Utsumi, Michitoshi Yoshida (NAOJ), Tomoki Morokuma (Chiba Tech), Akira Arai, Wanqui He, Yuki Moritani, Masato Onodera, Vera Maria Passegger, Ichi Tanaka, Kiyoto Yabe (NAOJ), Sean MacBride, Isaac McMahon, Marcelle Soares-Santos (UZH), Ken Herner (Fermilab), Simran Kaur (University of Michigan/UZH), Lillian Joseph (Benedictine U.), and Tom Diehl (FNAL) report on behalf of the Japanese Collaboration for Gravitational-Wave Electro-Magnetic Follow-up (J-GEM), Subaru Telescope, and Dark Energy Survey Gravitational Wave (DESGW) Team:

Between 05:11 and 10:20 UTC on April 3, 2025, we carried out spectroscopic observations with the Subaru/Prime Focus Spectrograph (PFS) following the LVK alert issued for the gravitational-wave event S250328ae (GCN 39898

Loading...
 
 
). The Subaru/PFS is a fiber spectrograph capable of observing ~2400 targets simultaneously within a ~1.25 square degree field of view, and covers a wavelength range of 380 nm to 1260 nm with a resolving power of ~2500-5500 (Sugai et al. 2015; Tamura et al. 2024). We observed seven pointings centered on the ICRS coordinates listed below:

RA [deg]Dec [deg]
144.13053010.436230
144.12650111.595492
145.1513679.856599
145.15136711.015861
145.15136712.175123
146.17623411.595492
146.18071712.754753

These seven pointings cover the ~50% localization region of the S250328ae event.

We observed targets selected from transient candidates of GCN 39934

Loading...
 
 
and 39992 (including candidates before and after vetting), X-ray sources from GCN 39972, and potential host galaxies from GLADE+ (Dálya et al. 2022) and PS1-STRM (Beck et al. 2021) catalogs in our pointings. A total of ~3900 targets were observed with an on-source exposure time of 1800 seconds in six pointings and 900 seconds in one pointing (shortened due to bad weather conditions).

We reduced the data on-site using the quick reduction system based on the PFS Data Reduction Pipeline, and then carried out classification (fitting galaxy, QSO, star, and supernova templates) and visual inspection. After classification and visual inspection, we obtained confident spectroscopic redshifts of ~70% of our targets. Among these sources, five candidates listed below were identified to be the possible electromagnetic counterpart to the gravitational-wave event S250328ae (within the ~90% three-dimensional localization volume partly covered by our pointings). Because these five candidates were originally selected from the GLADE+ and PS1-STRM catalogs that do not contain information of variability, we encourage follow-up observations to confirm their variability.

ID_PFSATNAMERA [deg]Dec [deg]Type_PFSRedshift
761AT2019uib145.71885712.412288QSO0.130
9238N/A145.41264412.717089QSO0.096
13647N/A144.98955310.636089QSO0.136
17165N/A145.73355911.593362QSO0.120
19826N/A145.35189312.503455QSO0.136

No counterparts to X-ray sources (GCN 39972

Loading...
 
 
) are recovered within their reported error bounds by our observations. We do not identify any transient candidates (GCN 39934 and 39992) we observed within the ~90% three-dimensional localization volume of S250328ae. These transient candidates falling outside the ~90% localization volume are listed below.

ID_ DESGWATNAMERA [deg]Dec [deg]Type_ DESGWType_PFSRedshift
2290036AT2025gek145.19948110.828527SN_LIKESN Ic0.233
2290467AT2020woa144.38879810.255536SN_LIKESN Ib0.050
2292782AT2025geo144.92857810.349243SN_LIKESN Ia0.182
2290334AT2025geq145.23561612.469694SN_LIKESN Ia0.186
2290623AT2025gen144.11246411.641817AGN_LIKESN II0.204
2291223N/A146.38956313.131801AGN_LIKEQSO0.540
2293190AT2025cvb144.19129710.828462SN_LIKESN Ia0.140
2290143AT2025ggv146.03390611.088812SN_LIKEQSO1.437
2292040AT2025ges144.4382169.885617AGN_LIKESN Ia0.434
2290059N/A144.67996110.018211AGN_LIKEQSO0.209
2292786N/A144.03766410.810454AGN_LIKESN Ia0.254
2293517AT2025geu145.95602412.381673AGN_LIKEQSO0.507
2295862N/A145.36111512.521385AGN_LIKEQSO0.969
2290563N/A145.14907411.756403AGN_LIKEQSO0.255
2289995AT2025ggx144.5737310.274445SN_LIKESN II0.358

We are grateful to the staffs at NAOJ and Subaru Telescope for their contributions to the deployments of PFS hardware and software, and the preparations of PFS system integration, engineering observations, and various other engineering works. Our thanks should also be propagated to the administrative staffs at Kavli IPMU, NAOJ, Subaru Telescope, and all the PFS institutes for kind supports in such aspects as finances, contracts, asset managements, and so on.

This research is based on data collected at the Subaru Telescope, which is operated by the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. We are honored and grateful for the opportunity of observing the Universe from Maunakea, which has the cultural, historical, and natural significance in Hawaii.

The DECam Search & Discovery Program for Optical Signatures of Gravitational Wave Events (DESGW) is carried out by the Dark Energy Survey (DES) collaboration in partnership with wide-ranging groups in the community. DESGW uses data obtained with the Dark Energy Camera (DECam), which was constructed by the DES collaboration with support from the Department of Energy and member institutions, and utilizes data as distributed by the Science Data Archive at NOIRLAB. NOIRLAB is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation. We thank the Cerro Tololo observatory staff for their support in acquiring these observations.

Looking for U.S. government information and services? Visit USA.gov