LIGO/Virgo S191216ap
GCN Circular 26835
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: Upper limits from Konus-Wind observations
Date
2020-01-21T08:46:32Z (6 years ago)
From
Anna Ridnaia at Ioffe Institute <ridnaia@mail.ioffe.ru>
A. Ridnaia, S. Golenetskii, R.Aptekar, D. Frederiks,
M. Ulanov, D. Svinkin, A. Tsvetkova, A. Lysenko, and T. Cline,
on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report:
Konus-Wind (KW) was observing the whole sky at the time of the
LIGO/Virgo event S191216ap (2019-12-16 21:33:38.473 UTC, hereafter T0;
LIGO/Virgo Collaboration GCN Circ. 26454).
No triggered KW GRBs happened ~14 days before and ~1 day
after T0. The closest waiting-mode GRB was observed ~29 hours after T0.
Using waiting-mode data within the interval T0 +/- 100 s,
we found no significant (> 5 sigma) excess over the background
in both KW detectors on temporal scales from 2.944 s to 100 s.
We estimate an upper limit (90% conf.) on the 20 - 1500 keV fluence
to 8.1x10^-7 erg/cm^2 for a burst lasting less than 2.944 s and having a
typical KW short GRB spectrum (an exponentially cut off power law with
alpha =-0.5 and Ep=500 keV). For a typical long GRB spectrum (the Band
function with alpha=-1, beta=-2.5, and Ep=300 keV), the corresponding
limiting peak flux is 2.4x10^-7 erg/cm^2/s (20 - 1500 keV, 2.944 s scale).
All the quoted values are preliminary.
GCN Circular 26605
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: Two candidate counterparts from UKIRT/WFCAM z-band observations
Date
2019-12-28T16:40:33Z (6 years ago)
From
Graham P Smith at U of Birmingham <gps@star.sr.bham.ac.uk>
G. P. Smith (Birmingham), M. Nicholl (Birmingham), K. Sharon (Michigan),
M. Bianconi (Birmingham), W. P. Varricatt (UKIRT), S. Benigni (UKIRT),
and E. J. Ridley (Birmingham) report on behalf of the Gravitationally
Lensed Gravitational Wave Hunters:
As part of our search for strongly-lensed gravitational waves and their
electromagnetic counterparts, we observed a contiguous area of 0.75
square degrees within the sky localization of the gravitational wave
trigger S191216ap (GCN #26454) with the WFCAM instrument on UKIRT
through the z-band. The observations were centered on the position of
the HAWC sub-threshold detection of gamma-ray flux reported by
Martinez-Castellanos (GCN #26472), and encompassed the full extent of
their 68% confidence region. The observations comprise two epochs:
Epoch Date(UT) Start(UT) End(UT) Airmass FWHM(arcsec)
1 2019-12-20 04:45:21 05:45:57 1.3-1.7 1.2-1.6
2 2019-12-21 04:31:26 05:43:34 1.3-1.8 1.6-1.8
We estimate that Epoch 1 reaches a 5 sigma point source sensitivity of
AB~21.5. Epoch 2 is less sensitive than Epoch 1, with noticeable
variations in Epoch 2 between the four observations required to achieve
contiguous coverage with WFCAM.
A preliminary comparison of Epoch 1 with templates derived from
Pan-STARRS1 data (nominal sensitivity of AB=22.3) identified two
candidate transient sources. Neither source is known to the Transient
Name Server, and Minor Planet Center. The celestial coordinates and
estimated z-band apparent AB magnitudes of these two candidates are:
Name RA(J2000) Dec(J2000) AB(Epoch1) AB(Epoch2)
GLGWc19a 21:32:45.50 +05:19:58.0 20.8+/-0.1 ~22
GLGWc19b 21:35:20.11 +04:55:19.8 20.6+/-0.1 >20(tentative)
Neither source is associated with an obvious candidate gravitational
lens (i.e. massive galaxy, group or cluster) to the depth of the PS1
data. However, GLGWc19a is 7 arcsec West, 1 arcsec North of the center
of an edge-on disk galaxy (possible host?) that is located at
21:32:45.97 +5:19:57.0.
These sources are observable at Airmass<2 for ~30 minutes following the
end of evening twilight in the Northern Hemisphere in the next few
nights, before becoming unobservable through the winter months. We
therefore encourage urgent follow-up observations of GLGWc19a, GLGWc19b
and the candidate host galaxy adjacent to GLGWc19a.
We thank the Director of UKIRT, Klaus Hodapp, for quickly approving our
urgent DDT proposal. We are also grateful to Mike Irwin for kindly
expediting the processing of our data at Cambridge Astronomy Survey Unit
(CASU).
This circular is citable.
GCN Circular 26570
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: Updated Source Classification
Date
2019-12-23T18:27:02Z (6 years ago)
From
Brandon Piotrzkowski at U of Wisconsin-Milwaukee <piotrzk3@uwm.edu>
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration report:
We have conducted further analysis of the LIGO Hanford Observatory
(H1) and Virgo Observatory (V1) data around the time of the compact
binary merger (CBC) candidate S191216ap (GCN Circular 26454).
Assuming the candidate is astrophysical, the updated parameter
estimation based classification of the GW signal, in order of
descending probability, is BBH (>99%), MassGap (<1%),
Terrestrial (<1%), BNS (<1%), or NSBH (<1%).
For further information about analysis methodology and the contents of
this alert, refer to the LIGO/Virgo Public Alerts User Guide
<https://emfollow.docs.ligo.org/userguide/>.
[1] Veitch et al. PRD 91, 042003 (2015)
GCN Circular 26569
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: Upper limits from Insight-HXMT/HE observations
Date
2019-12-23T14:58:42Z (6 years ago)
From
Qi Luo at IHEP <luoqi@ihep.ac.cn>
Q. Luo, Y. G. Zheng, C. Cai, S. Xiao, Q. B. Yi,
Y. Huang, C. K. Li, G. Li, X. B. Li, J. Y. Liao, S. L. Xiong,
C. Z. Liu, X. F. Li, Z. W. Li, Z. Chang, A. M. Zhang,
Y. F. Zhang, X. F. Lu, C. L. Zou (IHEP), Y. J. Jin,
Z. Zhang (THU), T. P. Li (IHEP/THU), F. J. Lu, L. M. Song,
M. Wu, Y. P. Xu, S. N. Zhang (IHEP),
report on behalf of the Insight-HXMT team:
Insight-HXMT was taking data normally around the reported LIGO/Virgo
S191216ap GW event (GCN #26454). At the GW trigger time
2019-12-16T21:33:38.473 UTC (denoted as T0), 0.96% of the GW localization
region was covered by the Insight-HXMT without occultation by the Earth.
Within T0 +/- 100 s, no significant excess events (SNR > 3 sigma) are
found in a search of the Insight-HXMT/HE raw light curves.
Assuming the GW counterpart GRB with three typical GRB Band spectral
models, two typical duration timescales (1 s, 10 s) from the center
of the GW location probability map (RA=288.6 deg, DEC=61.1 deg)
without occultation by the Earth, the 5-sigma upper-limits fluence
(0.2 - 5 MeV, incident energy) are reported below:
Band model 1 (alpha=-1.9, beta=-3.7, Ep=70 keV):
1 s: 5.8e-08 erg cm^-2
10 s: 1.9e-07 erg cm^-2
Band model 2 (alpha=-1.0, beta=-2.3, Ep=230 keV):
1 s: 1.0e-07 erg cm^-2
10 s: 3.4e-07 erg cm^-2
Band model 3 (alpha=-0.0, beta=-1.5, Ep=1000 keV):
1 s: 2.7e-07 erg cm^-2
10 s: 1.1e-06 erg cm^-2
Futhermore, from T0-15 minutes to T0+21 minutes, both the IceCube counterpart
neutrino candidate (GCN #26450) and the HAWC sub-threshold event (GCN #26472)
were invisible to Insight-HXMT due to the Earth shielding.
Assuming that the counterpart GRB comes from the HAWC location
(RA=323.5 deg, DEC=5.2 deg), we estimated 5-sigma upper-limits
(0.2 - 5 MeV, incident energy) of the extended emission of this GRB
at 2019-12-16T21:55:00.000 UTC (T0+1281.527 s) as follows:
Band model 1 (alpha=-1.9, beta=-3.7, Ep=70 keV):
1 s: 2.0e-08 erg cm^-2
10 s: 1.0e-07 erg cm^-2
Band model 2 (alpha=-1.0, beta=-2.3, Ep=230 keV):
1 s: 3.5e-08 erg cm^-2
10 s: 1.7e-07 erg cm^-2
Band model 3 (alpha=-0.0, beta=-1.5, Ep=1000 keV):
1 s: 1.5e-07 erg cm^-2
10 s: 5.6e-07 erg cm^-2
All measurements above are made with the CsI detectors operating in the
regular mode with the energy range of about 80-800 keV (deposited energy).
Only gamma-rays with energy greater than about 200 keV can penetrate
the spacecraft and leave signals in the CsI detectors installed inside
of the spacecraft.
GCN Circular 26563
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: No significant candidates found in Pan-STARRS observations
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) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:24:08.71, Dec=+13:46:38.8 and magnitude 19.80 +/- 0.15 on MJD 58836.235 in the PS1-r band. PS19hir is associated with the galaxy 2MASS J21240870+1346392 with a photometric redshift of 0.170 �� 0.0245. The object was detected on the subsequent night at a similar magnitude. The flatness of the lightcurve suggests this is a supernova.
PS19hik (AT2019xej) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:28:18.25, Dec=+03:48:56.8
and magnitude 19.12 +/- 0.11 on MJD 58836.232 in the PS1-r band. PS19hik is associated with the galaxy 2MASS J21281825+0348568 at a photometric redshift of 0.2260 �� 0.0627. The object was detected on the subsequent night at a similar magnitude. The flatness of the lightcurve suggests this is a supernova.
PS19hix (AT2019xfr) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:14:34.24, Dec=+29:03:22.0 and magnitude 20.54 +/- 0.27 on MJD 58836.229 in the PS1-r band. PS19hix does not appear to be associated with any catalogued galaxy, but lies near a faint, extended source in the PS1 exposure which is likely a galaxy. Additionally, the object was detected on the subsequent night at a similar magnitude, leading us to believe this is a supernova.
PS19his (AT2019xfk) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:17:50.87, Dec=+29:32:55.1 and magnitude 20.78 +/- 0.29 on MJD 58836.229 in the PS1-r band. PS19his does not appear to be associated with any catalogued galaxy, but lies near a faint, extended source in the PS1 exposure which is likely a galaxy. Additionally, the object was detected on the subsequent night at a similar magnitude, leading us to believe this is a supernova.
PS19hiy (AT2019xgz) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:18:49.41, Dec=+12:38:49.5 and magnitude 20.15 +/- 0.25 on MJD 58836.260 in the PS1-r band. PS19hiy is associated with the galaxy SDSS J211849.20+123849.5 at a photometric redshift of 0.284 �� 0.106. The object was detected on the subsequent night at a similar magnitude. The flatness of the lightcurve suggests this is a supernova.
PS19hiv (AT2019xfn) was discovered at coordinates RA=21:14:01.57, Dec=+22:36:54.9 and magnitude 18.41 +/- 0.05 on MJD 58837.270 in the PS1-r band. PS19hiv is a fast fading, faint, red source. As such, we believe this to be an M-dwarf flare.
GCN Circular 26531
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: VLA/JAGWAR radio monitoring of the 1-sigma HAWC region
Date
2019-12-21T18:40:24Z (6 years ago)
From
Kunal Mooley at NRAO,Caltech <kmooley@caltech.edu>
Kunal Mooley (NRAO, Caltech; Jansky Fellow), Steve Myers, Dale Frail
(NRAO), Alessandra Corsi, Arvind Balasubramanian, Deven Bhakta (TTU),
Gregg Hallinan, Shri Kulkarni (Caltech), report on behalf of the JAGWAR team
We have initiated deep C band (4-8 GHz) multi-epoch observations of the
1-sigma containment region (0.3 sq deg; HAWC Collaboration, GCN 25333)
coincident with the GW event S191216ap with the Karl G. Jansky Very
Large Array. A total of 37 pointings (7 arcmin FWHM primary beam at 6
GHz; pointing coordinates given below), observed as part of the JAGWAR
program, will achieve a uniform RMS noise of ~8 uJy over the survey
region. We will report any radio transients found through the GCN system.
Ra, Dec of the VLA C band pointings:
21:33:11.42�� +05:08:26.36
21:33:00.22�� +05:14:02.38
21:33:11.42�� +05:19:38.36
21:33:33.82�� +04:57:14.34
21:33:22.62�� +05:02:50.35
21:33:33.82�� +05:08:26.34
21:33:22.62�� +05:14:02.35
21:33:33.82�� +05:19:38.34
21:33:22.62�� +05:25:14.35
21:33:33.83�� +05:30:50.34
21:33:56.22�� +04:57:14.31
21:33:45.02�� +05:02:50.33
21:33:56.22�� +05:08:26.31
21:33:45.02�� +05:14:02.32
21:33:56.22�� +05:19:38.31
21:33:45.02�� +05:25:14.32
21:33:56.23�� +05:30:50.31
21:34:18.62�� +04:57:14.29
21:34:07.42�� +05:02:50.30
21:34:18.62�� +05:08:26.29
21:34:07.42�� +05:14:02.30
21:34:18.62�� +05:19:38.29
21:34:07.43�� +05:25:14.30
21:34:18.63�� +05:30:50.29
21:34:41.02�� +04:57:14.26
21:34:29.82�� +05:02:50.27
21:34:41.02�� +05:08:26.26
21:34:29.82�� +05:14:02.27
21:34:41.03�� +05:19:38.26
21:34:29.83�� +05:25:14.27
21:34:41.03�� +05:30:50.26
21:34:52.22�� +05:02:50.25
21:35:03.42�� +05:08:26.23
21:34:52.22�� +05:14:02.25
21:35:03.43�� +05:19:38.23
21:34:52.23�� +05:25:14.25
21:35:14.63�� +05:14:02.22
We thank the NRAO staff for scheduling and executing these observations.
GCN Circular 26530
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: No radio candidates so far in the VLA/JAGWAR galaxy targeted search
Date
2019-12-21T18:33:11Z (6 years ago)
From
Kunal Mooley at NRAO,Caltech <kmooley@caltech.edu>
Kunal Mooley (NRAO, Caltech; Jansky Fellow), Steve Myers, Dale Frail
(NRAO), Gregg Hallinan, Shri Kulkarni, Mansi Kasliwal (Caltech),
Alessandra Corsi (TTU), Leo Singer (GSFC) report on behalf of the JAGWAR
team
We observed the 9 GLADE galaxies (Singer et al. GCN 26479) consistent
with the HAWC/gamma-ray (Martinez-Castellanos et al. GCN 26472) and
S191216ap/BAYESTAR localization volume (Piotrzkowski et al. GCN 26454)
with the VLA between 4-8 GHz on 2019 Dec 18-19. No point-like sources
are detected within 50 kpc of any of the galaxies down to 20 uJy
(3sigma), except many of the galaxies have radio sources coincident with
their nuclei (see table below). Follow up VLA observations are planned.
| RAJ2000������ | DEJ2000���� | Dist�� | Flux_6GHz| Comments
| deg�������������� | deg������������ | Mpc���� | uJy���������� |
| ---------- | --------- | ----- | -------- | --------------------
| 323.482422 | +5.279632 | 274.4 | 820���������� | unresolved (12" beam)
| 323.056030 | +4.832057 | 219.1 | 370���������� | marginally resolved
| 322.921936 | +5.503483 | 232.2 | 80������������ | resolved
| 322.838806 | +5.255421 | 179.3 | 140���������� | unresolved
| 322.821228 | +5.553754 | 338.7 | 180���������� | unresolved **
| 322.749084 | +5.108610 | 330.8 | 155���������� | unresolved **
| 323.173767 | +4.467985 | 292.5 | <20 �������� |
| 322.906006 | +5.850705 | 323.1 | <15���������� |
| 323.034882 | +4.482058 | 340.7 | <20���������� | **
(**) We note that only these 3 galaxies (Ahumada et al. GCN 26507) lie
within the 95% 3D credible volume in the latest LALInference map
(Piotrzkowski et al. GCN 26505) for S191216ap.
We thank the NRAO staff for scheduling and executing these observations.
GCN Circular 26529
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: MASTER optical observation
Date
2019-12-21T16:50:55Z (6 years ago)
From
Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs <lipunov@xray.sai.msu.ru>
V. Lipunov, E. Gorbovskoy, V.Kornilov, N.Tyurina, P.Balanutsa,A.Kuznetsov,F.Balakin, K.Zhirkov,
V.Vladimirov, D. Vlasenko, I.Gorbunov, D.Zimnukhov, V.Senik, T.Pogrosheva, A.Chasovnikov,
D.Kuvshinov (Lomonosov Moscow State University, SAI, Physics Department),
O.A. Gres, N.M. Budnev, O.Ershova (Irkutsk State University, API),
R. Podesta, C.Lopez, F. Podesta, C.Francile(Observatorio Astronomico FelixAguilar OAFA),
H.Levato(Instituto de Ciencias Astronomicas, de la Tierra y del Espacio ICATE),
R. Rebolo, M. Serra(The Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias),
D. Buckley(South African Astronomical Observatory),
V. Yurkov, A. Gabovich, Yu. Sergienko(Blagoveschensk Educational State University)
A. Tlatov, D. Dormidontov (Kislovodsk Solar Station of the Pulkovo Observatory),
MASTER covered 812 square degrees of S191216ap
( MassGap (>99%); 324+/-78Mpc LVC GCN 26454, Lipunov et al. GCN 26457, GCN 26474;
Barthelmy collection https://gcn.gsfc.nasa.gov/other/S191216ap.gcn3)
that is equal to 92% of full error-box
https://master.sai.msu.ru/site/master2/ligo_1.php?id=11073
We report MASTER observation of the galaxies cross-matched with LVC and HAWC localization (Singer et al. GCN 26479)
without OT detection with the following limits:
Galaxy_Coordinates MASTER_first_image_UT mlim (unfiltered) MASTER_observatory
323.482422 +5.279632 2019-12-17 09:53:01 17.0 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 10:54:13 18.6 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-17 15:53:25 18.6 MASTER-Kislovodsk
323.056030 +4.832057 2019-12-17 09:41:42 17.3 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 12:09:47 18.6 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Tavrida
322.921936 +5.503483 2019-12-17 09:53:01 17.0 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 10:54:13 18.3 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Tavrida
2019-12-18 16:40:44 18.5 MASTER-Kislovodsk
322.838806 +5.255421 2019-12-17 09:53:01 17.0 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 12:09:47 18.6 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-17 15:53:25 18.6 MASTER-Kislovodsk
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Kislovodsk
322.821228 +5.553754 2019-12-17 09:53:01 17.0 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 10:54:13 18.3 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Tavrida
322.749084 +5.108610 2019-12-17 09:53:01 17.0 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 12:09:47 18.6 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-17 15:32:09 19.6 MASTER-Tavrida
2019-12-18 15:54:04 20.0 MASTER-Tavrida
323.173767 +4.467985 2019-12-17 09:41:42 17.3 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 15:53:25 18.6 MASTER-Kislovodsk
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Tavrida
322.906006 +5.850705 2019-12-17 09:53:01 17.0 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 10:54:13 18.3 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-17 16:30:37 18.5 MASTER-Kislovodsk
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Tavrida
323.034882 +4.482058 2019-12-17 09:41:42 17.3 MASTER-Amur
2019-12-17 15:53:25 18.6 MASTER-Tunka
2019-12-20 15:39:40 18.6 MASTER-Tavrida
The analysys will be continued.
The message may be cited.
GCN Circular 26528
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap : No significant candidates in FRAM-TAROT-GRANDMA observations
Date
2019-12-21T09:25:19Z (6 years ago)
From
Martin Blazek at HETH/IAA-CSIC <alf@iaa.es>
P.A. Duverne (LAL), S. Agayeva (SHAO), M. Blazek (HETH/IAA-CSIC), M.
Masek (FZU), S. Karpov, M. Prouza (FZU), M. Boer (Artemis),
N. Christensen (Artemis), L. Eymar (Artemis), A. Klotz (IRAP),
K. Noysena (Artemis,IRAP), S. Antier (APC), A. Coleiro (APC),
D. Corre (LAL), M. Coughlin (Caltech), D. Coward (OzGrav-UWA),
J.G. Ducoin (LAL), B. Gendre (OzGrav-UWA), P. Hello (LAL),
D. A. Kann (HETH/IAA-CSIC), N. Kochiashvili (Iliauni),
C. Lachaud (APC), N. Leroy (LAL), C. Thoene (HETH/IAA-CSIC),
D. Turpin (AIM-CEA), X. Wang (THU)
report on behalf of the FRAM, TAROT and GRANDMA collaborations.
We performed tiled observations of LIGO/Virgo S191216ap event
(#GCN 26454) with the FRAM-Auger, FRAM-CTA-N, TAROT-Calern (TCA),
TAROT-Chili (TCH) telescopes.
FRAM-Auger is located at Pierre Auger Observatory. FRAM-CTA-N is
located at Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos. TCA is located at
Calern site at the Cote d'Azur observatory. TCH is located at La Silla
ESO observatory (LaS/ESO).
+-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------+
| Telescope | Delay | Filter | f.o.v. | Limiting |
| | [min] | | [deg] | Mag. |
|-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------|
| FRAM-Auger | 228 | R | 1.0 x 1.0 | 18.0 (60s) |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 1296 | R | 0.45 x 0.45 | 17.0 (90s) |
| TCA | 1166 | Clear | 1.9 x 1.9 | 18.0 (60s) |
| TCH | 1658 | Clear | 1.9 x 1.9 | 18.0 (60s) |
+-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------+
We performed the following joint tiled observations [1] :
+-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+
| Telescope | TStart | TEnd | RA | DEC | Proba |
| | [UTC] | [UTC] | [deg] | [deg] | [%] |
|-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------|
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 321.186 | -1.460 | 0.3 |
| | 01:20:58 | 01:22:58 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 321.081 | -2.432 | 0.2 |
| | 01:25:12 | 01:29:39 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 321.081 | -3.405 | 0.2 |
| | 01:31:14 | 01:33:14 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 320.976 | -5.351 | 0.2 |
| | 01:48:45 | 01:53:12 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 320.763 | -8.270 | 0.3 |
| | 01:54:07 | 01:58:34 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 320.870 | -6.324 | 0.2 |
| | 01:59:16 | 02:03:43 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 321.744 | -8.270 | 0.2 |
| | 02:04:34 | 02:09:01 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 321.534 | -10.216 | 0.2 |
| | 02:19:59 | 02:24:26 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 318.536 | 27.312 | 0.2 |
| | 19:09:06 | 19:13:12 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 318.365 | 27.749 | 0.2 |
| | 19:13:31 | 19:17:37 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 318.668 | 25.565 | 0.2 |
| | 19:17:52 | 19:21:58 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 318.045 | 27.312 | 0.2 |
| | 19:22:14 | 19:26:20 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 319.110 | 24.254 | 0.2 |
| | 19:26:36 | 19:30:42 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 319.184 | 25.565 | 0.2 |
| | 19:31:02 | 19:35:08 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.209 | 31.681 | 0.2 |
| | 19:35:24 | 19:39:30 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.126 | 30.808 | 0.2 |
| | 19:39:45 | 19:43:51 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.025 | 32.118 | 0.2 |
| | 19:44:05 | 19:48:11 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.392 | 31.244 | 0.2 |
| | 19:48:30 | 19:52:36 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 316.777 | 32.555 | 0.2 |
| | 19:52:51 | 19:56:57 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 318.192 | 28.186 | 0.2 |
| | 19:57:14 | 20:01:20 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 318.018 | 28.623 | 0.2 |
| | 20:01:34 | 20:05:40 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 319.864 | 19.885 | 0.2 |
| | 20:06:02 | 20:10:08 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 316.589 | 32.992 | 0.2 |
| | 20:10:30 | 20:14:36 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.843 | 29.060 | 0.2 |
| | 20:14:54 | 20:19:00 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.717 | 29.497 | 0.2 |
| | 20:19:13 | 20:23:19 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 319.616 | 24.254 | 0.1 |
| | 20:23:36 | 20:27:42 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.308 | 30.371 | 0.2 |
| | 20:27:58 | 20:32:04 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-17 | 317.488 | 29.934 | 0.2 |
| | 20:32:24 | 20:36:30 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| TCA | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-18 | 316.229 | 35.280 | 2.9 |
| | 16:59:02 | 20:11:43 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-20 | 317.995 | 26.002 | 2.5 |
| | 18:07:04 | 18:43:14 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-17 | 2019-12-20 | 313.891 | 38.991 | 3.1 |
| | 18:13:50 | 18:49:58 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-18 | 2019-12-18 | 315.090 | 37.136 | 3.2 |
| | 19:13:09 | 19:19:31 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 317.502 | 27.857 | 2.7 |
| | 18:17:44 | 18:24:03 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 318.715 | 24.146 | 2.4 |
| | 18:24:28 | 18:30:47 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 317.048 | 33.424 | 2.6 |
| | 18:51:09 | 18:57:29 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 315.950 | 31.569 | 2.4 |
| | 19:02:54 | 19:09:13 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 312.628 | 40.847 | 2.7 |
| | 19:09:35 | 19:11:35 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 319.571 | 27.857 | 1.3 |
| | 19:33:09 | 19:35:09 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 314.852 | 33.424 | 1.9 |
| | 19:39:53 | 19:41:53 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 313.993 | 35.280 | 1.6 |
| | 19:48:00 | 19:54:19 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 309.886 | 44.558 | 2.1 |
| | 19:54:45 | 20:01:04 | | | |
| TCA | 2019-12-20 | 2019-12-20 | 320.726 | 23.671 | 0.7 |
| | 20:01:29 | 20:07:49 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| TCH | 2019-12-18 | 2019-12-18 | 319.592 | -9.050 | 0.2 |
| | 01:11:08 | 01:17:27 | | | |
| TCH | 2019-12-18 | 2019-12-18 | 319.385 | -10.868 | 0.2 |
| | 01:17:52 | 01:24:10 | | | |
| TCH | 2019-12-21 | 2019-12-21 | 319.797 | -7.232 | 0.3 |
| | 01:34:12 | 01:38:21 | | | |
+-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+
TStart and TEnd refers respectively to the time of the first and last
exposure for a given tile. Observations are not necessarily continuous
in this interval.
The Probability refers to the 2D spatial probability of the GW skymap
enclosed in a given tile.
These observations cover about 35.4% of the cumulative probability of
the LALInference skymap created on 2019-12-19 17:30:31 (UTC).
The coverage map is available at:
https://grandma-owncloud.lal.in2p3.fr/index.php/s/XgtMhPRxcyL09gR/
download?path=%2F&files=GRANDMA_S191216ap_1576913351.png
No significant transient candidates were found during our low latency
analysis [2,3].
GRANDMA (Global Rapid Advanced Network Devoted to the Multi-messenger
Addicts) is a network of robotic telescopes connected all over the
world with both photometry and spectrometry capabilities for Time-
domain Astronomy [2](https://grandma.lal.in2p3.fr/).
Details on the different telescopes are available on the GRANDMA web
pages.
[1] M. W Coughlin et al., MNRAS 2019, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2485
[2] S. Antier et al., MNRAS 2019, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz3142
[3] K. Noysena et al., ApJ 2019, arXiv:1910.02770
GCN Circular 26511
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: AstroSat CZTI upper limits
Date
2019-12-20T09:15:02Z (6 years ago)
From
Varun Bhalerao at Indian Inst of Tech <varunb@iitb.ac.in>
V. Shenoy (IITB), Aarthy E. (PRL), V. Bhalerao (IITB), D. Bhattacharya (IUCAA), A. R. Rao (TIFR), S. Vadawale (PRL) report on behalf of the AstroSat CZTI collaboration:
We have carried a search for X-ray candidates in Astrosat CZTI data in a 100 sec window around the trigger time of the MassGap merger event S191216ap (UTC 2019-12-16 21:33:38, GraceDB event). CZTI is a coded aperture mask instrument that has considerable effective area for about 29% of the entire sky, but is also sensitive to brighter transients from the entire sky. At the time of merger, Astrosat's nominal pointing is RA,DEC = 08:19:21.4,70:39:40.4 (124.8392,70.6612), which is ~79 deg away from the maximum probability location, which severely reduces the effective area of CZTI. At the time of merger event, the Earth-satellite-transient angle corresponding to maximum probability location is ~ 151 deg and hence is not occulted by Earth in satellite's frame. In a time interval of 100 sec around the event, the region of the LALInference map (LVC GCN 26505) which is not occulted by Earth in the satellite's frame has a cumulative probability of 1.0 (100%).
CZTI data were de-trended to remove orbit-wise background variation. We then searched data from the four independent, identical quadrants to look for coincident spikes in the count rates. Searches were undertaken by binning the data in 0.1s, 1s, and 10s respectively. Statistical fluctuations in background count rates were estimated by using data from 10 (+-5) neighbouring orbits. We selected confidence levels such that the probability of a false trigger in a 1000 sec window is 10^-4. We do not find any evidence for any hard X-ray transient in this window, in the CZTI energy range of 20-200 keV.
We use a detailed mass model of the satellite to calculate the direction-dependent instrument response for points in the visible sky. We then assume the source is modelled as a power law with photon index alpha = -1, and convert our count rate upper limits to direction-dependent flux limits. We obtain the following upper limits for source flux in the 20-200 keV band by taking a probability weighted mean over the visible sky:
0.1 s: flux limit= 3.69e-05 ergs/cm^2/s; fluence limit = 3.69e-06 ergs/cm^2
1.0 s: flux limit= 1.09e-05 ergs/cm^2/s; fluence limit = 1.09e-05 ergs/cm^2
10.0 s: flux limit= 1.61e-06 ergs/cm^2/s; fluence limit = 1.61e-05 ergs/cm^2
CZTI is built by a TIFR-led consortium of institutes across India, including VSSC, ISAC, IUCAA, SAC and PRL. The Indian Space Research Organisation funded, managed and facilitated the project.
GCN Circular 26509
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: Subaru/Hyper Suprime-Cam observations of GW+IceCube+HAWC error region
Date
2019-12-20T07:26:15Z (6 years ago)
From
Takayuki Ohgami at Konan University <t-ohgami@konan-u.ac.jp>
T. Ohgami, N. Tominaga (Konan U.), R. Ohsawa, Y. Niino, T. Morokuma (U. Tokyo), T. Terai, Y. Takagi, K. Yanagisawa, M. Yoshida (NAOJ), M. Sasada (Hiroshima U.), M. Tanaka (Tohoku U.), Y. Sekiguchi (Toho U.), Y. Utsumi (Stanford/SLAC) on behalf of J-GEM collaboration
Following detections of S191216ap by LIGO-Virgo (Piotrzkowski et al., GCN Circ. 26454, 26505) and possible related events by IceCube (Hussain et al., CGN Circ. 26460) and by HAWC (Martinez-Castellano et al., GCN Circ. 26472), we selected a galaxy, GL213356+051647 (ra, dec = 323.4824, 5.2796 at 274.42 Mpc), from our candidate selection algorithm based on the GLADE v2.3 catalog (Dalya et al., 2018) and the localization maps. Our candidate galaxy is also ranked as the top candidate in Singer et al. (GCN Circ. 26479).
Using a 1.5 deg circular aperture of Subaru/Hyper Suprime-Cam which covers the HAWC's 68% credible region, we imaged a region around GL213356+051647 with an integration time of 2730 sec for z-band, starting from 2019-12-20 05:06 UT. An estimated limiting magnitude is 25.5. We found no apparent transient associated with GL213356+051647. More detailed analysis is ongoing, and further follow-up observations are planned.
We thank Subaru's staff for making this observation.
GCN Circular 26507
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: UPDATED list of galaxies coincident with LIGO/Virgo LALInference skymap and HAWC positions
Date
2019-12-20T04:18:37Z (6 years ago)
From
Shreya Anand at GROWTH Caltech <sanand@caltech.edu>
T. Ahumada (UMD), S. Anand (Caltech), and L.P. Singer (NASA-GSFC)�report on behalf of the GROWTH collaboration:
Based on the new LALInference map (GCN 26505), we re-ran our galaxy cross-match from GCN 26479 with the HAWC position (GCN 26472)and the GLADE v2.3 catalog (Dalya et al., 2018), to identify sources within the 90% LIGO/Virgo credible volume and within a 3-sigma radius of the HAWC candidate. Our updated search yields only three matching galaxies, which were in our previously reported list of galaxies (GCN 26479). All of the galaxies in our previous list are within the 95% 3D credible level in the LALInference map; we report only those galaxies still within the 90% 3D credible level.
The distance parameters from the LALInference localization at the
position of the HAWC candidate are DISTMU= 272.35 Mpc and DISTSIGMA= 44.52 Mpc.
In the table below, we give the right ascensions and declinations in
degrees and luminosity distances in Mpc. The "GW C.L." column
provides the LIGO/Virgo 3D credible level within which the galaxy is
found (smaller values mean more consistent with the GW position). The
"HAWC sigma" column gives the separation from the HAWC position,
divided by the HAWC 1-sigma error radius.
| RAJ2000 � �| DEJ2000 � | Dist �| GW C.L. | HAWC sigma |
| ---------- | --------- | ----- |-------- | ---------- |
| 322.821228 | +5.553754 | 338.7 | 81 � � �| 2.59 � � � |
| 322.749084 | +5.108610 | 330.8 | 78 � � �| 2.62 � � � |
| 323.034882 | +4.482058 | 340.7 | 86 � � �| 2.99 � � � |
GROWTH is a worldwide collaboration comprising of Caltech, USA; IPAC,
USA; WIS, Israel; OKC, Sweden; JSI/UMD, USA; U Washington, USA; DESY,
Germany; MOST, Taiwan; UW Milwaukee, USA; LANL USA; Tokyo Tech,
Japan; IITB, India; IIA, India; LJMU, UK; TTU, USA; SDSU, USA and
USyd, Australia. ZTF acknowledges the generous support of the NSF
under AST MSIP Grant No 1440341. GROWTH acknowledges generous support
of the NSF under PIRE Grant No 1545949.
GCN Circular 26505
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: Updated Sky Localization
Date
2019-12-19T17:59:21Z (6 years ago)
From
Brandon Piotrzkowski at U of Wisconsin-Milwaukee <piotrzk3@uwm.edu>
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration report:
We have conducted further analysis of the LIGO Hanford Observatory
(H1) and Virgo Observatory (V1) data around the time of the compact
binary merger (CBC) candidate S191216ap (GCN Circular
26454). Parameter estimation has been performed using
LALInference [1] and a new sky map, LALInference.fits.gz,0,
distributed via GCN Notice, is available for retrieval from the
GraceDB event page:
https://gracedb.ligo.org/superevents/S191216ap
The preferred sky map at this time is LALInference.fits.gz,0. For the
LALInference.fits.gz,0 sky map, the 90% credible region is 253 deg2.
Marginalized over the whole sky, the a posteriori luminosity distance
estimate is 376 +/- 70 Mpc (a posteriori mean +/- standard deviation).
For further information about analysis methodology and the contents of
this alert, refer to the LIGO/Virgo Public Alerts User Guide
<https://emfollow.docs.ligo.org/userguide/>.
[1] Veitch et al. PRD 91, 042003 (2015)
GCN Circular 26498
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap, Swift XRT observations: 16 X-ray sources in the HAWC error region search
Date
2019-12-19T09:22:13Z (6 years ago)
From
Phil Evans at U of Leicester <pae9@leicester.ac.uk>
P.A. Evans (U. Leicester), J.A. Kennea (PSU), A. Tohuvavohu (U.
Toronto), S.D. Barthelmy (NASA/GSFC), A.P. Beardmore (U. Leicester),
M.G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB), A.A. Breeveld (UCL-MSSL), P. Brown (TAMU),
D.N. Burrows (PSU), S. Campana (INAF-OAB), S.B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), G.
Cusumano (INAF-IASF PA), A. D'Ai (INAF-IASFPA), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB),
V. D'Elia(ASDC), S.W.K. Emery (UCL-MSSL), P. Giommi (ASI), C. Gronwall
(PSU), D. Hartmann (U. Clemson), H.A. Krimm (CRESST/GSFC/USRA), N.J.
Klingler (PSU), N.P.M. Kuin (UCL-MSSL), A.Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC), F.E.
Marshall (NASA/GSFC), A. Melandri (INAF-OAB), J.A. Nousek (PSU), S.R.
Oates (U. Birmingham), P.T. O'Brien (U. Leicester), J.P. Osborne (U.
Leicester), C. Pagani (U. Leicester), K.L. Page (U.Leicester), M.J.Page
(UCL-MSSL), D.M. Palmer (LANL), M. Perri (ASDC), J.L. Racusin
(NASA/GSFC), B. Sbarufatti (INAF-OAB/PSU), M.H. Siegel (PSU), G.
Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), E. Troja (NASA/GSFC/UMCP) report on behalf of
the Swift team:
Swift has carried out further observations of S191216ap. We performed a
series of tiles to cover the HAWC error region (GCN Circ. 26472) for
500 s per tile, and then 3ks observations of each of the galaxies
listed by Singer et al (GCN Circ. 26479). All of the Swift pointings
and associated metadata have been reported to the Treasure Map (Wyatt
et al., GCN Circ. 26244;
http://treasuremap.space/alerts?graceids=S191216ap).
In these observations, we detected 17 X-ray sources, these are either
new detections, or have been given a higher 'rank' than in the last
circular. Each source is assigned a rank of 1-4 which describes how
likely it is to be related to the GW trigger, with 1 being the most
likely and 4 being the least likely. The ranks are described at
https://www.swift.ac.uk/ranks.php.
We have found:
* 0 sources of rank 1
* 0 sources of rank 2
* 13 sources of rank 3
* 4 sources of rank 4
RANK 3 sources
==============
These are uncatalogued X-ray sources, however they are not brighter
than previous upper limits, so do not stand out as likely counterparts
to the GW trigger.
| Source ID | RA | Dec | Err90 |
| S191216ap_X4 | 21h 33m 49.19s | +04d 57' 18.9" | 6.7" |
| S191216ap_X5 | 21h 33m 18.81s | +05d 17' 04.9" | 6.9" |
| S191216ap_X6 | 21h 34m 53.19s | +05d 19' 11.0" | 6.6" |
| S191216ap_X7 | 21h 32m 44.20s | +04d 20' 06.0" | 5.8" |
| S191216ap_X8 | 21h 32m 47.89s | +04d 27' 52.2" | 5.5" |
| S191216ap_X9 | 21h 32m 26.75s | +04d 21' 31.6" | 5.3" |
| S191216ap_X10 | 21h 32m 6.50s | +04d 18' 38.2" | 6.9" |
| S191216ap_X12 | 21h 31m 46.59s | +05d 44' 44.4" | 7.0" |
| S191216ap_X13 | 21h 31m 56.80s | +05d 11' 22.4" | 8.0" |
| S191216ap_X17 | 21h 31m 43.77s | +05d 25' 15.7" | 6.0" |
| S191216ap_X19 | 21h 31m 57.63s | +04d 43' 38.4" | 7.4" |
| S191216ap_X20 | 21h 31m 31.98s | +04d 54' 03.0" | 5.0" |
| S191216ap_X21 | 21h 31m 44.49s | +05d 23' 12.0" | 7.4" |
RANK 4 sources
==============
These are catalogued X-ray sources, showing no signs of outburst
compared to previous observations, so they are not likely to be related
to the GW trigger.
| Source ID | RA | Dec | Err90 |
| S191216ap_X11 | 21h 32m 41.01s | +04d 24' 18.6" | 6.2" |
| S191216ap_X14 | 21h 30m 32.91s | +05d 02' 18.4" | 7.6" |
| S191216ap_X15 | 21h 30m 26.31s | +05d 06' 07.0" | 7.2" |
| S191216ap_X16 | 21h 31m 22.64s | +05d 02' 37.5" | 5.4" |
For all flux conversions and comparisons with catalogues and upper
limits from other missions, we assumed a power-law spectrum with
NH=3x10^20 cm^-2, and photon index (Gamma)=1.7
The results of the XRT automated analysis, including details of the
sources listed above, are online at
https://www.swift.ac.uk/LVC/S191216ap
This circular is an official product of the Swift XRT team.
GCN Circular 26496
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S191216ap: No candidates found in J-GEM follow-up observations of HAWC error region
Date
2019-12-19T07:32:40Z (6 years ago)
From
Mahito Sasada at Hiroshima University <sasadam@hiroshima-u.ac.jp>
Yanagisawa, K.; Yoshida, M. (NAOJ); Onozato, H.; Takahashi, J. (U. Hyogo); Itoh, R. (Bisei Astronomical observatory); Takarada, T. (Saitama U.); Sasada, M. (Hiroshima U.); Utsumi, Y. (Stanford/SLAC); Toma, S.; Adachi, R.; Murata, K. L. (Tokyo Tech.)
on behalf of J-GEM collaboration
Following detections of the LIGO-Virgo (S191216ap; Piotrzkowski, GCN Circ. 26454