GCN Circular 41439
Subject
LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA S250818k: Pan-STARRS pre-detection limits for AT2025ulz
Date
2025-08-20T09:52:22Z (4 days ago)
From
Matt Nicholl at Queens University Belfast <matt.nicholl@qub.ac.uk>
Via
Web form
M. Nicholl, D. R. Young, A. Aamer, C. R. Angus, M. D. Fulton, D. Magill, M. McCollum, T. Moore, S. Sim, J. Weston, X. Sheng (QUB), S. J. Smartt, K.W. Smith, J. Gillanders, S. Srivastav, H. Stevance, F. Stoppa, J. Tweddle (Oxford), L. Shingles (GSI/QUB), P. Ramsden (Birmingham/QUB), K. C. Chambers, M. E. Huber, A. S. B. Schultz, T. de Boer, J. Fairlamb, C. C. Lin, T. Lowe, E. Magnier, P. Minguez, G, Paek, I. A. Smith, R. J. Wainscoat (IfA, Univ. Hawaii), T.-W. Chen (NCU), A. Rest (STScI), C. Stubbs (Harvard):
We report pre-discovery limits on the source AT2025ulz, reported by Stein et al. (GCN 41414) and possibly associated with the sub-threshold gravitational wave candidate S20250818k (The LIGO-Virgo-Kagra Collaboration, GCN 41437), obtained with the Pan-STARRS telescope system (Chambers et al., 2016, ArXiv e-prints, 1612.05560). The Pan-STARRS system comprises of two 1.8m telescope units located at the summit of Haleakala on the Hawaiian island of Maui, employing an SDSS-like filter system denoted as grizy, and a broad w-filter, which is a composite of the gri-filters. In our primary NASA mission for Near-Earth Object discovery, we scan the visible night sky North of -50 degrees declination to magnitude depths m~22, weather and Moon permitting.
Examining recent data obtained during normal Pan-STARRS survey coverage (see Fulton et al. 2025, MNRAS, 542, 541) at the location of AT2025ulz, we report the following pre-discovery upper limits and time since the S20250818k trigger (t-t0)
Date t-t0 (days) Magnitude Band
60904.233 -0.82 <19.7 y
60895.314 -9.7 <21.0 i
We note that the y-band non-detection was obtained only ~0.8 days before the GW signal. This indicates that there was no bright, red transient at this position less than a day prior.
The images were processed with the Pan-STARRS pipeline. After astrometric and photometric calibration, reference images were subtracted from the target images (Magnier et al., 2020a, ApJS, 251, 3; Magnier et al., 2020b, ApJS, 251, 6; Waters et al., 2020, ApJS, 251, 4).
Further Pan-STARRS grizy imaging of this source, and coverage of the S20250818k skymap (northern banana) is underway in the i-band with PS1 and PS2 jointly.
The discoveries from this program are a byproduct of the Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) NEO survey observations. Operation of the Pan-STARRS1 and Pan-STARRS2 telescopes is primarily supported by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration under Grant No. NNX12AR65G and Grant No. NNX14AM74G issued through the SSO Near-Earth Object Observations Program. Data are processed at Queen's University Belfast enabled through the STFC grants ST/P000312/1 and ST/T000198/1.