GCN Circular 41461
Subject
LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA S250818k: WFST pre-discovery limits and follow-up observations of AT 2025ulz
Date
2025-08-21T09:00:21Z (10 months ago)
From
Zhengyan Liu at USTC <ustclzy@mail.ustc.edu.cn>
Via
Web form
Z. Y. Liu, Z. L. Xu, D. Z. Meng, J.-A. Jiang, W. Zhao, M. X. Cai, Z. G. Dai, L. L. Fan, N. Jiang, X. Kong, T. G. Wang (USTC), Y. Z. Fan, J. J. Geng, Z. P. Jin, X. F. Wu (PMO) report on behalf of the WFST Collaboration:
We report the pre-discovery upper limits and follow-up photometry results of AT2025ulz/ZTF25abjmnps reported by Stein et al. (GCN 41414), possibly associated with the sub-threshold gravitational wave (GW) event S250818k (GCN 41437), using the Wide Field Survey Telescope (WFST Collaboration; Wang et al., 2023).
After checking WFST archive data, we found u- and g-band 30s exposures taken at MJD 60901.66, about 3.4 days prior to the GW event trigger. The images were processed with the WFST pipeline, using stacked WFST multi-exposures taken in February 2025 as templates. We do not found any residuals in difference images in the two bands. We report the following pre-discovery 3-sigma upper limits and time since the S20250818k trigger (t-t0):
MJD t-t0 (days) AB mag Band
60901.64 -3.42 > 22.1 u
60901.67 -3.38 > 22.4 g
We conducted WFST follow-up observations of AT2025ulz with 120s exposures in g and r bands and a 180s exposure in u band beginning at 2025-08-20T14:24:03 UTC. After image subtraction, a clear source was detected in g band, and faint sources detected in u and r bands, which are close to the detection limit. The preliminary AB magnitudes of AT2025ulz are (all photometries are not corrected for Galactic extinction):
MJD t-t0 (days) AB mag Band
60907.60 2.54 22.71+/-0.10 g
60907.61 2.55 22.78+/-0.16 r
60907.65 2.59 23.24+/-0.24 u
The g-r and u-g color from WFST observations are approximately -0.1 mag and 0.5 mag, respectively, which became bluer compared with the previous reports (Hall et al., GCN 41433; O’Connor et al., GCN 41452; Gillanders et al., GCN 41454). Additionally, our results show a re-brightening trend for AT2025ulz, which may be related to the shock-cooling process mentioned in Gillanders et al. (GCN 41454). We also note that AT2025ulz is significantly more luminous than AT 2017gfo at the same phase, especially in g and u bands assuming a host redshift 0.0848 reported by Karambelkar et al. (GCN 41436