LIGO/Virgo S200224ca
GCN Circular 27524
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Swift XRT observations, 8 X-ray sources
Date
2020-04-10T13:13:23Z (6 years ago)
From
Kim Page at U.of Leicester <klp5@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 675 observations of the LVC error region for the
GW trigger S200224ca convolved with the 2MPZ catalogue (Bilicki et al.
2014, ApJS, 210, 9), using the 'bayestar' (version 1) GW localisation
map. As this is a 3D skymap, galaxy distances were taken into account
in selecting which ones to observe. The observations currently span
from 21 ks to 1542 ks after the LVC trigger, and the XRT has covered
64.5 deg^2 on the sky (corrected for overlaps). This covers 81% of the
probability in the 'LALInference' (version 1) skymap, and 79% after
convolving with the 2MPZ galaxy catalogue, as described by Evans et al.
(2016, MNRAS, 462, 1591). These pointings and associated metadata have
been reported to the Treasure Map (Wyatt et al., arXiv 2001.00588;
http://treasuremap.space/alerts?graceids=S200224ca).
We have detected 8 X-ray sources. 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
* 2 sources of rank 3
* 6 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 |
| S200224ca_X5 | 11h 35m 31.08s | -12d 42' 10.0" | 6.3" |
| S200224ca_X9 | 11h 37m 19.09s | -04d 43' 59.6" | 6.2" |
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 |
| S200224ca_X1 | 11h 42m 19.04s | -14d 22' 38.7" | 5.2" |
| S200224ca_X3 | 11h 35m 55.12s | -11d 42' 24.8" | 5.9" |
| S200224ca_X4 | 10h 50m 7.75s | +11d 32' 31.0" | 4.5" |
| S200224ca_X7 | 11h 41m 41.71s | -14d 07' 50.2" | 5.2" |
| S200224ca_X8 | 11h 25m 51.91s | -07d 42' 25.5" | 5.1" |
| S200224ca_X10 | 11h 52m 3.55s | -11d 22' 21.8" | 4.7" |
The Swift-XRT observations also covered the locations of 13 sources
reported by other observers, thus:
* AT2020dlp (GCN27227) F < 4.1x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dlt (GCN27227) F < 4.2x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dlu (GCN27227) F < 4.4x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dlv (GCN27227) F < 2.9x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dlw (GCN27227) F < 2.5x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmb (GCN27227) F < 4.1x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmc (GCN27227) F < 4.1x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dme (GCN27227) F < 2.4x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmg (GCN27227) F < 3.9x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmh (GCN27227) F < 4.6x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmi (GCN27227) F < 2.0x10^-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmj (GCN27227) F < 3.4x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
* AT2020dmk (GCN27227) F < 2.8x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
Flux limits are 3-sigma upper limits on the 0.3-10 keV observed flux.
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/S200224ca
This circular is an official product of the Swift XRT team.
GCN Circular 27483
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Upper limits from Konus-Wind observations
Date
2020-04-03T22:13:46Z (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 S200224ca (2020-02-24 22:22:34.406 UTC, hereafter T0;
LIGO/Virgo Collaboration GCN Circ. 27184).
No triggered KW GRBs happened between ~17 hours before and ~3 days
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 8.3x10^-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 2.7x10^-7 erg/cm^2/s (20 - 1500 keV, 2.944 s scale).
All the quoted values are preliminary.
GCN Circular 27366
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: DESGW Summary of DECam Observations
Date
2020-03-11T20:39:09Z (6 years ago)
From
Robert Morgan at U. of Wisconsin-Madison <robert.morgan@wisc.edu>
Robert Morgan (Univ. Wisconsin-Madison), Antonella Palmese (Fermilab), Alyssa Garcia (Brandeis Univ.), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis Univ.), Ken Herner (Fermilab), Clecio R. Bom (CBPF), Constantina Nicolaou (University College London), Kathy Vivas (NSF�s OIR Lab), Alfredo Zenteno (NSF�s OIR Lab), and Juan Garcia-Bellido (IFT-UAM) on behalf of the DESGW Collaboration*.
We triggered the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile on the localization area of the binary-black-hole merger event detected by LIGO Livingston, LIGO Hanford, and Virgo (S200224ca, GCN 27184). Observations took place on 2020-02-24, 2020-02-25, 2020-02-27, and 2020-03-05 in the i-band and reached 10-sigma limiting magnitudes of 23.17, 23.19, 23.49, and 23.03 respectively. Each night, the area was covered twice and images on the same night were coadded to increase our depth.
We determined interesting candidates from our observations by selecting sources not present in archival DECam images, requiring a detection in both exposures on 2020-02-24, requiring that if redshift information exists for the host galaxy that it be consistent with the LVC distance posterior assuming a standard cosmological model, that the candidate have at least one autoscan (Goldstein 2015) score > 0.7 for image artifact rejection, and that the object not be detected on 2020-03-05. We also removed objects listed as variable stars in the GAIA DR2 catalog, and visually inspected the images. All DECam candidates in GCN 27227 were rejected by the required non-detection on 2020-03-05 (i.e., they are consistent with supernovae).
After completing our follow-up, we find 8 interesting transient objects and document them below. Each object was detected on 2020-02-24, too faint to detect in our observations on 2020-03-05, and it was visually matched to a host galaxy.
TNS ID | DESGW NAME | RA | DEC | BRIGHTEST MAG_i
2020eho | desgw-200224-aa | 173.542273 | -11.413514 | 23.35 +/- 0.12
2020ehp | desgw-200224-ab | 177.589350 | -9.9630310 | 22.63 +/- 0.09
2020ehq | desgw-200224-ac | 174.445462 | -10.039503 | 23.01 +/- 0.18
2020ehr | desgw-200224-ad | 172.931711 | -4.1346680 | 22.76 +/- 0.10
2020eht | desgw-200224-ae | 177.718160 | -10.190816 | 23.18 +/- 0.11
2020ehv | desgw-200224-af | 175.921426 | -6.8633130 | 22.78 +/- 0.11
2020ehw | desgw-200224-ag | 175.770071 | -6.2421670 | 22.88 +/- 0.11
2020ehy | desgw-200224-ah | 176.700106 | -11.848473 | 23.08 +/- 0.12
Candidates with a host galaxy in DESI imaging (Dey et al. 2019), SDSS or 2MASS have host galaxy properties tabulated below:
TNS ID | DESGW NAME | HOST ID | HOST RA | HOST DEC | HOST SEP (") | HOST MAG_i | Host Redshift | SOURCE
2020eht | desgw-200224-ad | 1237671129660261003 | 172.928529 | -4.135549 | 11.86 | 19.67 | 0.31 +/- 0.13 | SDSS
2020ehv | desgw-200224-af | -- | 175.920943 | -6.864041 | 3.14 | -- | 0.2754 +/- 0.045 | DESI imaging
The DESI imaging redshifts are the photometric redshifts from Zhou et al. (2020).
*The DESGW Collaboration:
Sahar Allam (Fermilab), James Annis (Fermilab), Iair Arcavi (Tel Aviv U), Tristan Bachmann (U Chicago), Paulo Barchi (INPE & Brandeis U), Thomas Beatty (U of Arizona) Keith Bechtol (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Federico Berlfein (Brandeis U), Antonio Bernardo (U of Sao Paulo), Dillon Brout (U Penn), Robert Butler (Indiana U), Melissa Butner, (Fermilab), Annalisa Calamida (STScI), Hsin-Yu Chen (Harvard U), Chris Conselice (U of Nottingham), Carlos Contreras (STScI), Jeff Cooke (Swinburne U), Chris D�Andrea (U Penn), Tamara Davis (U Queensland), Reinaldo de Carvalho (UNICSUL), H. Thomas Diehl (Fermilab), Zoheyr Doctor (U Chicago), Alex Drlica-Wagner (Fermilab), Maria Drout (U Toronto), Maya Fishbach (U Chicago), Francisco Forster (U de Chile), Ryan Foley (UCSC), Joshua Frieman (Fermilab & U Chicago), Chris Frohmaier (U of Portsmouth), Ori Fox (STScI), Alyssa Garcia (Brandeis U), Juan Garcia-Bellido (U Autonoma de Madrid), Mandeep Gill (SLAC & Stanford U), Robert Gruendl (NCSA), Will Hartley (U College London), Kenneth Herner (Fermilab), Daniel Holz (U Chicago), Jorge Horvath (U of Sao Paulo), D. Andrew Howell (Las Cumbres Observatory), Richard Kessler (U Chicago), Charles Kilpatrick (UCSC), Nikolay Kuropatkin (Fermilab), Ofer Lahav (U College London), Huan Lin (Fermilab), Andrew Lundgren (U of Portsmouth), Martin Makler (CBPF), Clara Martinez-Vazquez (CTIO/NOAO), Curtis McCully (Las Cumbres Observatory), Mitch McNanna (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Robert Morgan (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Gautham Narayan (STScI), Eric Neilsen (Fermilab), Robert Nichol (U of Portsmouth), Antonella Palmese (Fermilab), Francisco Paz-Chinchon (NCSA & UIUC), Matthew Penny (OSU), Maria Pereira (Brandeis U), Sandro Rembold (UFSM), Armin Rest (STScI & JHU), Livia Rocha (U Sao Paulo), Russell Ryan (STScI), Masao Sako (U Penn), Samir Salim (Indiana U), David Sand (U of Arizona), Luidhy Santana-Silva (Valongo Observatory), Daniel Scolnic (Duke U), Nora Sherman (Fermilab), J. Allyn Smith (Austin Peay State U), Mathew Smith (U of Southampton), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis U), Lou Strolger (STScI), Riccardo Sturani (UFRN), Mark Sullivan (U of Southampton), Masaomi Tanaka (NAOJ), Nozomu Tominaga (Konan U), Douglas Tucker (Fermilab), Yousuke Utsumi (Stanford U), Stefano Valenti (UC Davis), Kathy Vivas (NOAO/CTIO), Alistair Walker (NOAO/CTIO), Sara Webb (Swinburne U), Matt Wiesner (Benedictine U), Brian Yanny (Fermilab), Michitoshi Yoshida (NAOJ), Alfredo Zenteno (NOAO/CTIO)
GCN Circular 27293
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: No counterpart candidates in TOROS observations
Date
2020-03-03T01:57:38Z (6 years ago)
From
Richard Camuccio at TOROS <rcamuccio@gmail.com>
Mario Diaz (UTRGV/CGWA), Diego Garcia Lambas (IATE), Lucas Macri (TAMU),
Jose Luis Nilo Castellon (Univ La Serena), Omar Lopez-Cruz (UNAM)
Richard Camuccio (UTRGV/CGWA), Martell Valencia (UTRGV/CGWA), Victor Perez
(UTRGV/CGWA), Wahltyn Rattray (UTRGV/CGWA) are reporting on behalf of the
TOROS collaboration.
We report the following targeted observations in response to S200224ca
conducted by
the Cristina Torres Memorial Observatory (CTMO) in Brownsville, Texas:
SDSS J113309.58-085247.9, RA: 173.289917 deg, Dec: -8.879995 deg
SDSS J113813.09-113309.0, RA: 174.558000 deg, Dec: -11.552510 deg
SDSS J113817.07-113633.2, RA: 174.574000 deg, Dec: -11.609180 deg
SDSS J113440.11-074557.5, RA: 173.667145 deg, Dec: -7.765990 deg
Observations were conducted on 2020-02-25 from 04:00 to 06:00 UT and
2020-03-01 from 04:00 to 09:00 UT using the CTMO CDK17 optical astrograph
and ProLine 16803 CCD camera (43 arcminute FOV). For 02-25 observations, we
took 10x30-second exposures in SDSS u'-band at 1x1 binning. For 03-01
observations, we took 15x60-second unfiltered exposures at 2x2 binning.
Source search is ongoing and we will report any positive transient
detection.
GCN Circular 27288
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Transient found in Swift/UVOT counterpart search
Date
2020-03-02T17:34:15Z (6 years ago)
From
Alice Breeveld at MSSL-UCL <a.breeveld@ucl.ac.uk>
A. A. Breeveld (MSSL-UCL), S. R. Oates (U. Birmingham), F. E. Marshall (NASA/GSFC), N. P. M. Kuin
(UCL-MSSL), P. Brown (TAMU), C. Gronwall (PSU), M.J. Page (UCL-MSSL), M. De Pasquale (Istanbul U.),
M. H. Siegel (PSU), A. D'Ai (INAF-IASFPA), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), S. D. Barthelmy (NASA/GSFC), A.
P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), D. N. Burrows (PSU), S. Campana (INAF-OAB), S. B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), G.
Cusumano (INAF-IASF PA), V. D'Elia(ASDC), P. A. Evans (U. Leicester), P. Giommi (ASI), D. Hartmann
(Clemson U.), J. A. Kennea (PSU), N. J. Klingler (PSU), H. A. Krimm (NSF), A. Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC),
D. B. Malesani (DTU Space), A. Melandri (INAF-OAB), J. A. Nousek (PSU), P. T. O'Brien (U.
Leicester), J. P. Osborne (U. Leicester), C. Pagani (U. Leicester), K. L. Page (U.Leicester), D.M.
Palmer (LANL), M. Perri (ASDC), J. L. Racusin (NASA/GSFC), T. Sakamoto (AGU), B. Sbarufatti
(INAF-OAB/PSU), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), A. Tohuvavohu (U Toronto), and E. Troja (NASA/GSFC/UMCP)
report on behalf of the Swift team:
We report a transient found in the UVOT search results of the LVC event S200224ca (LIGO/VIRGO
Collaboration GCN Circ. 27184).
On 2020-02-25 at 16:05:25 UT Swift UVOT took a 75s exposure, 63.7ks after the GW trigger, in the u
band (exposure ID uu604339530, target ID 07031750) which showed a source that had brightened
significantly compared with archival images/catalogues. The source is not seen in the DSS, is not
listed in the Gaia DR2, 2MASS or GSC2.3 catalogues and is not listed as a minor planet. However, a
source is seen at this position in the Pan-STARRS catalogue (id 94241765879572233) with imag=21.6,
and in VISTA (id 473452322969).
The position is:
RA = 176.58794 deg
Dec = -11.46508 deg
which is RA=11:46:21.11, Dec=-11:27:54.3 (J2000).
The magnitude using the UVOT photometric system (Breeveld et al. 2011, AIP Conf. Proc. 1358, 373)
is u=18.6 +/- 0.2 mag (Vega). In a followup observation with all filters, 275ks after the GW
trigger, the object had faded to u>19.6 mag, with upper limits in all filters.
Filter Date-obs Exp(s) Mag
u 2020-02-25T16:05:25 75 18.6 +/- 0.2
v 2020-02-28T02:44:02 334 >19.5
b 2020-02-28T02:48:35 122 >19.9
u 2020-02-28T02:47:27 143 >19.6
w1 2020-02-28T02:46:19 307 >19.7
m2 2020-02-28T02:45:10 333 >19.7
w2 2020-02-28T02:42:54 333 >19.9
No source is found at this position in the XRT, with a 3-sigma upper limit of 4.75 x 10-3 s^-1
which corresponds to a 0.3-10 keV observed flux of 1.9e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1.
At this position, the distance estimate from the LALInference sky map has a mean of 1556.46 Mpc with
a sigma of 320.357 Mpc.
This circular is an official product of the Swift team.
GCN Circular 27262
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Updated Sky Localization and EM Bright Classification
Date
2020-02-28T18:24:40Z (6 years ago)
From
Vinaya Valsan at U. of Wisconsin Milwaukee <vvalsan@uwm.edu>
The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration report:
We have conducted further analysis of the LIGO Hanford Observatory
(H1), LIGO Livingston Observatory (L1), and Virgo Observatory (V1)
data around the time of the compact binary merger (CBC) candidate
S200224ca (GCN Circular 27184). Parameter estimation has been
performed using LALInference [1] and a new sky map,
LALInference.fits.gz,1, distributed via GCN Notice, is available for
retrieval from the GraceDB event page:
https://gracedb.ligo.org/superevents/S200224ca
The preferred sky map at this time is LALInference.fits.gz,1. For the
LALInference.fits.gz,1 sky map, the 90% credible region is 72 deg2.
Marginalized over the whole sky, the a posteriori luminosity distance
estimate is 1575 +/- 322 Mpc (a posteriori mean +/- standard
deviation).
Based on posterior support from parameter estimation [1], under the
assumption that the candidate S200224ca is astrophysical in origin,
the probability that the lighter compact object has a mass < 3 solar
masses (HasNS) is <1%. Using the masses and spins inferred from the
signal, the probability of matter outside the final compact object
(HasRemnant) is <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 27238
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca : No significant candidates in TAROT - FRAM - GRANDMA observations
Date
2020-02-27T13:17:57Z (6 years ago)
From
Tatyana Sadibekova at AIM-CEA Saclay <tatyana.sadibekova@cea.fr>
T. Sadibekova (AIM-CEA), H. Crisp (OzGrav-UWA), P. Hello (IJCLab),
Z. Vidadi (SHAO), (FZU), M. Boer (Artemis), N. Christensen (Artemis),
L. Eymar (Artemis), S. Karpov (FZU), A. Klotz (IRAP), M. Masek (FZU),
K. Noysena (Artemis, IRAP), S. Antier (APC), A. Coleiro (APC), D. Corre
(IJCLab), M. Coughlin (UMN), D. Coward (OzGrav-UWA), J.G. Ducoin
(IJCLab), B. Gendre (OzGrav-UWA), D. A. Kann (HETH/IAA-CSIC),
N. Kochiashvili (Iliauni), C. Lachaud (APC), N. Leroy (IJCLab),
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 S200224ca event with the
FRAM-Auger, FRAM-CTA-N, TAROT-Calern (TCA), TAROT-Chili (TCH), TAROT-
Reunion (TRE) 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). TRE is located at Les Makes astronomical
observatory.
The following table shows for each telescope: the delay in minutes
from the trigger, which filter is used, the field of view of the
telescope in degrees and the typical limiting magnitude (AB mag) for a
given exposure in seconds (s).
+-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------+
| Telescope | Delay | Filter | f.o.v. | Limiting |
| | [min] | | [deg] | Mag. |
|-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------|
| FRAM-Auger | 415 | R | 1.0 x 1.0 | 18.0 (60s) |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 20 | R | 0.45 x 0.45 | 17.0 (90s) |
| TCA | 15 | Clear | 1.9 x 1.9 | 18.0 (60s) |
| TCH | 301 | Clear | 1.9 x 1.9 | 18.0 (60s) |
| TRE | 47 | Clear | 4.2 x 4.2 | 17.0 (60s) |
+-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------+
We performed the following joint tiled observations [1] :
+-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+
| Telescope | TStart | TEnd | RA | DEC | Proba |
| | [UTC] | [UTC] | [deg] | [deg] | [%] |
|-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------|
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.082 | -9.243 | 3.7 |
| | 05:16:43 | 05:21:10 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.562 | -10.216 | 3.7 |
| | 05:21:47 | 05:26:13 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.055 | -11.189 | 4.0 |
| | 05:26:48 | 05:31:15 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.575 | -10.216 | 3.9 |
| | 05:31:51 | 05:36:18 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.605 | -8.270 | 3.4 |
| | 05:36:54 | 05:41:21 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 176.044 | -11.189 | 3.4 |
| | 05:42:12 | 05:46:39 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.098 | -9.243 | 3.5 |
| | 05:47:13 | 05:51:40 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 176.022 | -12.162 | 3.2 |
| | 05:52:18 | 05:56:45 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.130 | -7.297 | 2.8 |
| | 05:57:20 | 06:01:47 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 173.624 | -8.270 | 3.0 |
| | 06:02:25 | 06:06:51 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.028 | -12.162 | 2.7 |
| | 06:20:49 | 06:30:32 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 176.066 | -9.243 | 2.1 |
| | 06:31:07 | 06:35:34 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.586 | -8.270 | 2.0 |
| | 06:36:08 | 06:40:35 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 173.152 | -7.297 | 2.2 |
| | 06:41:12 | 06:45:39 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 176.510 | -13.135 | 2.3 |
| | 06:46:17 | 06:50:44 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.130 | -6.324 | 1.9 |
| | 06:51:22 | 06:55:49 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 176.548 | -10.216 | 1.9 |
| | 06:56:25 | 07:00:52 | | | |
| FRAM-Auger | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.066 | -11.189 | 2.2 |
| | 07:01:27 | 07:05:54 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.905 | -9.823 | 0.9 |
| | 22:41:52 | 22:45:58 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.336 | -10.260 | 0.9 |
| | 22:46:12 | 22:50:18 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.690 | -9.387 | 0.9 |
| | 22:50:32 | 22:54:38 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.348 | -9.823 | 0.9 |
| | 22:54:52 | 22:58:58 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.779 | -10.260 | 0.9 |
| | 22:59:11 | 23:03:17 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.553 | -10.697 | 0.9 |
| | 23:03:32 | 23:07:38 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.995 | -10.697 | 0.9 |
| | 23:07:51 | 23:11:57 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.212 | -11.134 | 0.9 |
| | 23:12:16 | 23:16:22 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.657 | -11.134 | 0.9 |
| | 23:16:42 | 23:20:48 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.461 | -9.823 | 0.9 |
| | 23:21:03 | 23:25:09 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.591 | -8.513 | 0.8 |
| | 23:25:28 | 23:29:35 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.247 | -9.387 | 0.8 |
| | 23:34:14 | 23:38:20 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.133 | -9.387 | 0.8 |
| | 23:38:34 | 23:42:40 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.693 | -8.950 | 0.7 |
| | 23:43:00 | 23:47:06 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 175.429 | -11.571 | 0.8 |
| | 23:47:27 | 23:51:33 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-24 | 174.149 | -8.513 | 0.8 |
| | 23:51:53 | 23:55:59 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-25 | 175.875 | -11.571 | 0.8 |
| | 23:56:15 | 00:00:21 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.377 | -8.076 | 0.7 |
| | 00:00:51 | 00:04:57 | | | |
| FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.135 | -8.950 | 0.7 |
| | 00:05:11 | 00:09:17 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| TCA | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-27 | 170.656 | -8.825 | 0.3 |
| | 22:37:11 | 00:35:59 | | | |
| TCA | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-27 | 172.453 | -13.012 | 0.2 |
| | 22:49:55 | 00:42:44 | | | |
| TCA | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-26 | 179.075 | -11.156 | 0.2 |
| | 22:56:39 | 22:19:30 | | | |
| TCA | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 172.642 | 0.022 | 0.2 |
| | 00:53:10 | 20:59:30 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| TCH | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 174.965 | -10.000 | 13.6 |
| | 03:23:32 | 08:29:47 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-26 | 173.064 | -11.343 | 2.5 |
| | 03:34:04 | 09:42:58 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-26 | 171.384 | -0.909 | 0.8 |
| | 03:49:52 | 07:25:08 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-27 | 178.600 | -14.505 | 1.0 |
| | 08:38:18 | 00:42:33 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-26 | 178.619 | -12.686 | 0.9 |
| | 08:44:37 | 09:45:10 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-26 | 170.827 | -7.232 | 0.7 |
| | 08:58:03 | 09:21:08 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-26 | 2020-02-26 | 174.143 | -1.777 | 0.2 |
| | 00:53:49 | 08:47:05 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-26 | 2020-02-26 | 174.618 | -3.595 | 0.7 |
| | 02:41:32 | 09:19:02 | | | |
| TCH | 2020-02-26 | 2020-02-26 | 175.020 | -5.414 | 2.1 |
| | 04:16:46 | 07:04:56 | | | |
| ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- |
| TRE | 2020-02-24 | 2020-02-26 | 175.909 | -4.091 | 3.0 |
| | 23:08:49 | 00:02:00 | | | |
| TRE | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-25 | 175.814 | -12.273 | 33.5 |
| | 18:30:11 | 18:36:33 | | | |
| TRE | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-26 | 173.793 | -8.182 | 36.5 |
| | 23:23:32 | 01:06:18 | | | |
| TRE | 2020-02-25 | 2020-02-26 | 171.818 | -4.091 | 9.7 |
| | 23:36:44 | 19:42:42 | | | |
| TRE | 2020-02-26 | 2020-02-26 | 177.931 | -8.182 | 5.3 |
| | 01:18:59 | 01:25:16 | | | |
| TRE | 2020-02-26 | 2020-02-26 | 175.714 | -16.364 | 4.1 |
| | 19:49:32 | 19:55:54 | | | |
+-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+
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 93.3% of the cumulative probability of
the BAYESTAR skymap created on 2020-02-24 22:23:22 (UTC).
The coverage map is available at:
https://grandma-
owncloud.lal.in2p3.fr/index.php/s/XgtMhPRxcyL09gR/download?path=%2F&files=GRANDMA_S200224ca_1582797966.svg
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 27231
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Upper limits from CALET observations.
Date
2020-02-27T05:53:24Z (6 years ago)
From
Yuta Kawakubo at Louisiana State U./CALET <kawakubo1@lsu.edu>
Y. Kawakubo (LSU), A. Yoshida, T. Sakamoto, V. Pal'shin,
S. Sugita (AGU), K. Yamaoka (Nagoya U), S. Nakahira (RIKEN),
Y. Asaoka, S. Torii (Waseda U), Y. Shimizu,
T. Tamura (Kanagawa U), N. Cannady (GSFC/UMBC),
M. L. Cherry (LSU), S. Ricciarini (U of Florence),
P. S. Marrocchesi (U of Siena),
and the CALET collaboration:
At the trigger time of the compact binary merger candidate
S200224ca T0 = 2020-02-24 22:22:34.406 UT (The LIGO
Scientific Collaboration and Virgo Collaboration, GCN
Circ. 27184), the CALET Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (CGBM)
high voltages were off (from T0-18 min to T0+1 min).
The CALET Calorimeter (CAL) was operating in the high
energy trigger mode at the trigger time of S200224ca. Using
the CAL data, we have searched for gamma-ray events in the
10-100 GeV band from -60 sec to +60 sec from the GW trigger
time and found no candidates in the overwrap region with the
LIGO-Virgo high probability localization region. The 90%
upper limit of CAL is 5.0 x 10^-7 erg/cm^2/s (10-100 GeV)
when the summed LIGO-Virgo probability reaches 95%. The CAL
FOV was centered at RA = 167.5 deg, DEC = -24.8 deg at T0.
GCN Circular 27227
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: DESGW Optical counterpart candidates from DECam
Date
2020-02-26T18:36:54Z (6 years ago)
From
Robert Morgan at U. of Wisconsin-Madison <robert.morgan@wisc.edu>
Robert Morgan (Univ. Wisconsin-Madison), Alyssa Garcia (Brandeis Univ.), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis Univ.), Ken Herner (Fermilab), Clecio R. Bom (CBPF), Antonella Palmese (Fermilab), Megan Tabbutt (Univ. Wisconsin-Madison), Katelyn Stringer (Texas A&M Univ.), Kathy Vivas (NSF�s OIR Lab), Alfredo Zenteno (NSF�s OIR Lab), Thomas Puzia (Pontificia Universidad Cat�lica de Chile), and Eric Peng (Peking Univ.) on behalf of the DESGW Collaboration*.
We triggered the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile on the localization are of the binary-black-hole merger event detected by LIGO Livingston, LIGO Hanford, and Virgo (S200224ca, GCN 27184). Observations began at 06:30 UT and lasted 72 minutes, during which time we covered the entire 50% localization area and most of the 90% localization area. We took 90 second i band exposures and repeated coverage of the area a second time to rule out moving objects. These observations reached an 10 sigma i band limiting magnitude of 22.64 mag.
We determined interesting candidates from our observations by selecting sources not present in archival DECam images, requiring a detection in both exposures, requiring that if redshift information exists for the host galaxy that it be consistent with the LVC distance posterior assuming a standard cosmological model, and that the candidate have at least one autoscan (Goldstein 2015) score > 0.88 for image artifact rejection. We also removed objects listed as variable stars in the GAIA DR2 catalog, and visually inspected the images.
The candidates from our first night of observations are tabulated below:
TNS ID | DESGW NAME | RA | DEC | MAG_i
2020dlp | desgw-200224-e | 173.37895 | -11.375735 | 21.83 +/- 0.04
2020dlt | desgw-200224-i | 172.183856 | -7.852997 | 21.47 +/- 0.05
2020dlu | desgw-200224-j | 177.633327 | -11.562617 | 21.07 +/- 0.02
2020dlv | desgw-200224-k | 172.702488 | -11.339593 | 21.76 +/- 0.05
2020dlw | desgw-200224-l | 176.600488 | -10.618643 | 21.71 +/- 0.04
2020dlz | desgw-200224-o | 172.314739 | -11.461327 | 21.94 +/- 0.05
2020dmb | desgw-200224-q | 176.001543 | -13.715623 | 21.71 +/- 0.05
2020dmc | desgw-200224-r | 176.854035 | -9.675706 | 22.28 +/- 0.09
2020dme | desgw-200224-t | 176.664265 | -8.132082 | 22.42 +/- 0.08
2020dmg | desgw-200224-v | 173.216383 | -9.730723 | 22.40 +/- 0.09
2020dmh | desgw-200224-w | 173.520275 | -10.733151 | 22.58 +/- 0.09
2020dmi | desgq-200224-x | 176.640751 | -11.507011 | 22.21 +/- 0.08
2020dmj | desgw-200224-y | 173.771767 | -11.109408 | 22.15 +/- 0.06
2020dmk | desgw-200224-z | 172.877293 | -3.765198 | 22.68 +/- 0.10
Candidates with a host galaxy in SDSS or 2MASS have host galaxy properties tabulated below:
TNS ID | DESGW NAME | HOST ID | HOST RA | HOST DEC | HOST SEP (�) | HOST MAG_i | Host Redshift | SOURCE
2020dlt | desgw-200224-i | 1237671140940252161 | 172.183362 | -7.853086 | 1.79 | 21.47 | 0.188+/- 0.041 | SDSS
Analysis of these candidates is ongoing and spectroscopic characterization is encouraged. More information on these candidates, such as updated host galaxy properties and more photometric observations, is currently being collected.
*The DESGW Collaboration:
Sahar Allam (Fermilab), James Annis (Fermilab), Iair Arcavi (Tel Aviv U), Tristan Bachmann (U Chicago), Paulo Barchi (INPE & Brandeis U), Thomas Beatty (U of Arizona) Keith Bechtol (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Federico Berlfein (Brandeis U), Antonio Bernardo (U of Sao Paulo), Dillon Brout (U Penn), Robert Butler (Indiana U), Melissa Butner, (Fermilab), Annalisa Calamida (STScI), Hsin-Yu Chen (Harvard U), Chris Conselice (U of Nottingham), Carlos Contreras (STScI), Jeff Cooke (Swinburne U), Chris D�Andrea (U Penn), Tamara Davis (U Queensland), Reinaldo de Carvalho (UNICSUL), H. Thomas Diehl (Fermilab), Zoheyr Doctor (U Chicago), Alex Drlica-Wagner (Fermilab), Maria Drout (U Toronto), Maya Fishbach (U Chicago), Francisco Forster (U de Chile), Ryan Foley (UCSC), Joshua Frieman (Fermilab & U Chicago), Chris Frohmaier (U of Portsmouth), Ori Fox (STScI), Alyssa Garcia (Brandeis U), Juan Garcia-Bellido (U Autonoma de Madrid), Mandeep Gill (SLAC & Stanford U), Robert Gruendl (NCSA), Will Hartley (U College London), Kenneth Herner (Fermilab), Daniel Holz (U Chicago), Jorge Horvath (U of Sao Paulo), D. Andrew Howell (Las Cumbres Observatory), Richard Kessler (U Chicago), Charles Kilpatrick (UCSC), Nikolay Kuropatkin (Fermilab), Ofer Lahav (U College London), Huan Lin (Fermilab), Andrew Lundgren (U of Portsmouth), Martin Makler (CBPF), Clara Martinez-Vazquez (CTIO/NOAO), Curtis McCully (Las Cumbres Observatory), Mitch McNanna (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Robert Morgan (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Gautham Narayan (STScI), Eric Neilsen (Fermilab), Robert Nichol (U of Portsmouth), Antonella Palmese (Fermilab), Francisco Paz-Chinchon (NCSA & UIUC), Matthew Penny (OSU), Maria Pereira (Brandeis U), Sandro Rembold (UFSM), Armin Rest (STScI & JHU), Livia Rocha (U Sao Paulo), Russell Ryan (STScI), Masao Sako (U Penn), Samir Salim (Indiana U), David Sand (U of Arizona), Luidhy Santana-Silva (Valongo Observatory), Daniel Scolnic (Duke U), Nora Sherman (Fermilab), J. Allyn Smith (Austin Peay State U), Mathew Smith (U of Southampton), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis U), Lou Strolger (STScI), Riccardo Sturani (UFRN), Mark Sullivan (U of Southampton), Masaomi Tanaka (NAOJ), Nozomu Tominaga (Konan U), Douglas Tucker (Fermilab), Yousuke Utsumi (Stanford U), Stefano Valenti (UC Davis), Kathy Vivas (NOAO/CTIO), Alistair Walker (NOAO/CTIO), Sara Webb (Swinburne U), Matt Wiesner (Benedictine U), Brian Yanny (Fermilab), Michitoshi Yoshida (NAOJ), Alfredo Zenteno (NOAO/CTIO)
GCN Circular 27219
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Upper limits from Insight-HXMT/HE observations
Date
2020-02-26T08:06:44Z (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
S200224ca event (GCN #27184). At the GW trigger time
2020-02-24T22:22:34.406 UTC (denoted as T0), about 99.6% 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 LIGO-Virgo location probability map (RA=174.9 deg, DEC=-9.8 deg),
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: 1.4e-07 erg cm^-2
10 s: 1.1e-06 erg cm^-2
Band model 2 (alpha=-1.0, beta=-2.3, Ep=230 keV):
1 s: 2.2e-07 erg cm^-2
10 s: 1.7e-06 erg cm^-2
Band model 3 (alpha=-0.0, beta=-1.5, Ep=1000 keV):
1 s: 6.8e-07 erg cm^-2
10 s: 3.9e-06 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 27216
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: no counterpart candidates in the Swift/BAT observations
Date
2020-02-26T01:35:06Z (6 years ago)
From
Amy Lien at GSFC <amy.y.lien@nasa.gov>
S. D. Barthelmy (NASA/GSFC), A. Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC),
D. M. Palmer (LANL), T. Sakamoto (AGU),
A. P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), M. G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB),
A. A. Breeveld (MSSL-UCL), 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 (ASI-ASDC), S. Emery (UCL-MSSL),
P. A. Evans (U. Leicester), P. Giommi (ASI), C. Gronwall (PSU),
D. Hartmann (Clemson U.), J. A. Kennea (PSU),
N. Klingler (PSU), H. A. Krimm (NSF),
N. P. M. Kuin (UCL-MSSL), F. E. Marshall (NASA/GSFC),
A. Melandri (INAF-OAB), J. A. Nousek (PSU),
S. R. Oates (U. of 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), M. Perri (ASDC),
J. L. Racusin (NASA/GSFC), B. Sbarufatti (INAF-OAB/PSU),
M. H. Siegel (PSU), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), A. Tohuvavohu (U. Toronto),
E. Troja (NASA/GSFC/UMCP) report on behalf of the Swift team:
We report the search results in the BAT data within T0 +/- 100 s of the
LVC event S200224ca (LIGO/VIRGO Collaboration GCN Circ. 27184),
where T0 is the LVC trigger time (2020-02-24T22:22:34.378 UTC).
The center of the BAT field of view (FOV) at T0 is
RA = 136.122 deg,
DEC = -32.441 deg,
and the roll angle is 204.112 deg.
The BAT FOV (>10% partial coding) covers 88.38% of the integrated
LVC localization probability, and 87.02% of the galaxy convolved
probability (Evans et al. 2016). Note that the sensitivity in the BAT FOV
changes with the partial coding fraction. Please see the BAT FOV figure
in the summary page (link below) for the specific location of the LVC
region relative to the BAT FOV.
Within T0 +/- 100 s, no significant detections (signal-to-noise ratio
>~ 5 sigma) are found in the BAT raw light curves with time bins of 64 ms,
1 s, and 1.6 s. Assuming a short GRB with a typical
spectrum in the BAT energy range (i.e., a simple power-law model with a
power-law index of -1.32, Lien & Sakamoto et al. 2016), the 5-sigma upper
limit in the 1-s binned light curve corresponds to a flux upper
limit (15-350 keV) of ~ 8.56 x 10^-8 erg/s/cm^2 for the 100% coded region
(i.e., for a burst with 0 deg from BAT boresight) and ~ 1.80 x 10^-6
erg/s/cm2
for the 10% coded region (~56 deg from BAT boresight).
Assuming a luminosity of ~ 2 x 10^47 erg/s (similar to GW170817)
and an average Epeak of ~ 400 keV for short GRBs (Bhat et al. 2016),
these flux upper limits corresponds to a distance of ~ 77.68 Mpc (100%
coded)
and ~ 16.93 Mpc (10% coded).
Event data are available from T0+29.042 s to T0+45.176 s via the GUANO
system
(Tohuvavohu et al. 2020, in prep). No significant detections (above our
typical
image threshold of ~ 6.5 to 7 sigma) are found in the 15-350 keV images
created using intervals of the whole event data range.
BAT retains decreased, but significant, sensitivity to rate increases for
gamma-ray events outside of its FOV. About 11.62% of the integrated LVC
localization probability was outside of the BAT FOV but above the
Earth's limb from Swift's location, and the corresponding flux upper limits
for this region are within roughly an order of magnitude higher than those
within the FOV.
The results of the BAT analysis are available at
https://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov/results/BATbursts/team_web/S200224ca/web/source_public.html
GCN Circular 27213
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: No counterpart candidates in KAIT observations
Date
2020-02-25T23:06:59Z (6 years ago)
From
Weikang Zheng at UC Berkeley <weikang@berkeley.edu>
Sergiy Vasylyev, Benjamin E. Stahl, Yukei Murakami, Andrew Hoffman,
James Sunseri, Keto D. Zhang, Shaunak Modak, WeiKang Zheng,
and Alexei V. Filippenko (UC Berkeley) report on behalf of
the Lick/KAIT GW follow-up team:
The 0.76-m Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope (KAIT), located at
Lick Observatory, observed the 90% region of the gravitational-wave
event S200224ca (GCN 27184) detected by LIGO/Virgo. More than
one thousand galaxies were selected from the Glade catalog V1.0
(Dalya et al., 2018, MNRAS, 479, 2374; http://aquarius.elte.hu/glade/)
according to their priority score. KAIT observed 77 of them based on
their priority scores and elevation visibility, with each clear-filter
exposure time being 60 s. The first image was taken at 05:01:26, Feb.
25th UT, about 6.7 hours after the trigger, and the last image at
09:29:37 UT. Our typical limiting mag is 19.0. No viable counterparts
were identified and the analysis is ongoing. A full list of galaxies
observed by KAIT is given below.
GladeID UT(Feb25) RA_J2000 Dec_J2000
-----------------------------------------------
G0673461 05:01:26 10:44:53.496 +12:35:05.892
G0698936 05:03:45 10:46:08.2543 +12:36:58.5792
G0629402 05:04:52 10:46:19.801 +12:37:19.56
G0806101 05:06:03 10:46:38.9429 +11:45:55.1124
G0518983 05:07:12 10:47:22.1998 +12:43:49.764
G0165487 05:08:21 10:48:17.6659 +13:54:41.58
G0400195 05:11:48 10:50:23.4156 +13:48:52.2252
G0259691 05:12:57 10:50:42.0482 +12:56:50.2152
G0782778 05:16:27 10:51:08.6683 +13:50:53.7324
G0654615 05:17:37 10:51:09.4445 +08:43:32.2752
G0679827 05:18:46 10:51:11.2975 +10:38:36.2796
G0787037 05:19:56 10:51:16.5161 +11:51:47.2824
G0619835 05:21:08 10:51:19.9915 +11:49:29.28
G0591424 05:22:17 10:51:29.4984 +10:41:08.4408
G0669021 05:26:59 10:51:43.3375 +10:45:24.4728
G0200654 05:28:09 10:51:46.8823 +08:46:31.476
G0583050 05:29:18 10:51:59.0551 +12:12:55.4868
G0556324 05:30:28 10:52:11.4074 +12:17:48.462
G1138356 05:31:37 10:52:32.9772 +10:36:20.5128
G0660070 05:32:46 10:52:48.241 +10:41:31.4772
G0626622 05:33:56 10:52:49.4347 +12:07:44.472
G0787922 05:35:05 10:52:59.4288 +10:12:38.772
G0628137 05:45:32 10:53:02.8565 +11:31:16.7772
G0296593 05:46:41 10:53:03.7097 +09:37:24.7764
G0709189 05:47:51 10:53:53.7487 +12:37:21.27
G0619660 05:49:00 10:54:09.1882 +12:33:24.2856
G0749789 05:50:09 10:54:17.19 +10:48:55.7316
G0841361 05:51:19 10:54:17.6844 +09:18:30.7332
G0828471 05:52:28 10:54:49.2773 +09:11:04.362
G0884104 05:53:37 10:54:59.8829 +09:11:26.3724
G1295231 05:54:46 10:55:00.8275 +12:02:53.3724
G0565461 05:55:56 10:55:23.4559 +11:18:59.256
G0549630 05:57:05 10:55:31.9044 +08:50:49.2648
G0093456 05:58:15 10:55:36.1524 +08:23:18.2688
G0569013 05:59:24 10:55:38.1408 +11:00:20.268
G0623088 06:00:34 10:55:53.6388 +15:20:27.3624
G0790896 06:01:43 10:56:06.8554 +10:58:22.6344
G0608596 06:02:53 10:56:15.487 +09:45:15.6168
G0280245 06:04:02 10:56:17.2303 +09:33:57.384
G1005344 06:05:16 10:56:39.4006 +07:07:20.4168
G0602699 06:06:25 10:56:44.0772 +09:45:32.4144
G0624595 06:07:34 10:56:44.1686 +07:09:04.4172
G1069807 06:08:44 10:57:07.2144 +10:20:32.892
G1163532 06:09:53 10:57:15.2381 +07:47:24.882
G1337604 06:11:02 10:57:23.5034 +08:49:37.1748
G0827745 06:12:12 10:57:31.8641 +08:17:56.1768
G1228502 06:13:21 20:11:20.7934 +69:57:42.7824
G0565601 08:55:53 10:59:10.1551 +07:48:32.2776
G0782794 08:57:02 10:59:18.175 +12:18:46.7856
G0743465 08:58:14 10:59:33.2189 +07:41:03.3288
G0682241 08:59:24 10:59:53.4706 +08:54:27.2052
G0791401 09:00:33 11:00:12.3888 +08:46:15.7584
G0797621 09:01:40 11:00:22.716 +08:20:17.7756
G0565575 09:02:50 11:00:31.4026 +07:16:16.7808
G0632512 09:03:59 11:00:33.6144 +06:12:13.7808
G0564972 09:05:08 11:00:40.8362 +07:13:24.7512
G0549831 09:06:17 11:01:01.9373 +07:16:50.7612
G0587079 09:07:27 11:02:43.7878 +05:22:52.5036
G0745333 09:08:36 11:05:26.3818 +03:17:33.0828
G0637766 09:09:50 11:06:38.1886 -02:43:10.2684
G0644398 09:11:01 11:07:28.6963 +03:48:08.9928
G0662623 09:12:10 11:08:03.9257 +02:00:13.7196
G0610069 09:13:20 11:08:21.731 +00:49:21.72
G0687196 09:14:29 11:08:43.7292 +00:27:27.5796
G0685235 09:15:38 11:09:46.2708 +00:48:49.2624
G0489553 09:16:48 11:09:48.5266 +01:25:23.2644
G0707360 09:17:57 11:10:33.3874 -00:34:58.2888
G0711373 09:19:06 11:11:00.5969 -00:53:34.7676
G0739801 09:20:18 11:11:16.3661 -06:16:03.3168
G0740915 09:21:29 11:11:16.9298 -00:49:27.75
G1052029 09:22:38 11:13:37.489 -01:57:20.5488
G0569482 09:23:48 11:14:00.6043 -00:20:11.1948
G0810723 09:25:00 11:14:39.1478 -05:18:24.5016
G1070206 09:26:09 11:14:42.1471 -03:48:51.5016
G0662104 09:27:19 11:15:57.8614 -02:10:14.304
G0203483 09:28:28 11:16:00.0074 -03:46:47.3052
G0726560 09:29:37 11:16:06.6761 -02:52:10.3008
GCN Circular 27212
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: No Counterparts in DDOTI/OAN Optical Observations
Date
2020-02-25T22:12:02Z (6 years ago)
From
Simone Dichiara at UMCP/NASA/GSFC <dichiara@umd.edu>
Simone Dichiara (GSFC/UMD), Eleonora Troja (GSFC/UMD), Alan M. Watson
(UNAM), Nat Butler (ASU), Margarita Pereyra (UNAM), William H. Lee (UNAM),
Alexander Kutyrev (GSFC/UMD), Rosa L. Becerra (UNAM), Diego Gonzalez
(UNAM), and Tanner Wolfram (ASU) report:
We observed LIGO/Virgo S200224ca (Valsan et al, GCN Circ. 27184) with the
DDOTI/OAN wide-field imager at the Observatorio Astronomico Nacional on
Sierra San Pedro Martir (http://ddoti.astroscu.unam.mx) on the night of
2020-02-25 UTC.
We tiled the LVC localization with two pointings centered on 11:35:23.26
-6:08:15.3 and 11:42:35.81 -11:48:03.3 (J2000). The combined
field covers about 135 square degrees and includes about 83% of the
probability in the current BAYESTAR map.
We observed from 2020-02-25 05:32 UTC to 2020-02-25 11:55 UTC (from 7.17 to
13.55 hours after the event) obtaining exposures of 123 to 155 minutes
across the field in the w filter. We calibrate our images against the APASS
catalog. The 10-sigma limiting magnitude is w = 20.0
Comparing our observations to the USNO-B1 and PanSTARRS PS1 DR2 catalogs we
detect no uncatalogued sources within the observed field to our 10-sigma
limit.
We thank the staff of the Observatorio Astronomico Nacional in San Pedro
Martir.
GCN Circular 27211
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: GRAWITA-Campo Imperatore observations.
Date
2020-02-25T21:25:28Z (6 years ago)
From
Fiore De Luise at INAF-Osservatorio Astro. d'Abruzzo <fiore.deluise@inaf.it>
F. De Luise, P. Tedesco, N. Napoleone (INAF- OAAb), A. Rossi (INAF-OAS), M.
Dolci, G. Valentini, M. Cantiello, A. Di Cianno, A. Valentini, L.P.
Pacinelli (INAF- OAAb), M. Fiaschi (MFC Elettronica), G. Greco (Univ.
Urbino), E. Cappellaro (INAF-OA Pd), P. D'Avanzo(INAF- OABr), A. Grado
(INAF-OA Capodimonte), and E. Brocato (INAF- OAAb and OAR), report on
behalf of GRAWITA:
We carried out observations of the LIGO/Virgo trigger GW S200224ca (GCN
Circ. #27184) using the INAF-OAAb 0.9m Schmidt Telescope of the INAF -
Astronomical Observatory of Abruzzo located at 2150 meters o.s.l. at Campo
Imperatore (Italy) and equipped with a 4096x4096 CCD covering a field of
view of 1.15��1.15 square degrees.
Due to weather conditions, only three pointings were made covering an area
of nearly 4 square degrees; a containment probability of ~ 8 % of the 50%
credible region was captured. The pointing sequence was generated using the
GWsky script (G. Greco, https://github.com/ggreco77/GWsky), starting from
the high probability region of the bayestar skymap and taking into account
the airmass and relative density of nearby galaxies at the distance of 1585
+/- 331 Mpc.
The total exposure time for each image was 3x180 sec. The observations were
taken with the r-Sloan band on 2020-02-24 starting at 23:47:37.0 UT, about
one hour after the GW detection (i.e. 2020-02-24 22:22:34.406 UTC). The
estimated limiting magnitude in r-Sloan is about 21.5 mag.
Hereafter the log of the observations.
| RA (J2000) | Dec (J2000) | UT time | filter | exposure time|
| 11:43:50.29 | -07:49:10 | 2020-02-24T23:47:37.0 | r-sloan | 3x180 sec |
| 11:35:44.35 | -07:49:10 | 2020-02-25T00:04:09.6 | r-sloan | 3x180 sec |
| 11:39:47.98 | -07:49:35 | 2020-02-25T00:20:44.8 | r-sloan | 3x180 sec |
The analysis of images is ongoing.
--------------------------------------------
De Luise Fiore, PhD
INAF - Osservatorio Astronomico d'Abruzzo
Via Mentore Maggini, s.n.c.
64100 - TERAMO
Tel +39-0861-439712
Fax +39-0861-439740
--------------------------------------------
GCN Circular 27205
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: Subaru/Hyper Suprime-Cam follow-up observations
Date
2020-02-25T16:17:36Z (6 years ago)
From
Takayuki Ohgami at Konan University <t-ohgami@konan-u.ac.jp>
T. Ohgami, N. Tominaga (Konan U.),
T. Morokuma (U. Tokyo),
T. Terai, Y. Takagi, K. Yanagisawa, M. Yoshida (NAOJ),
H. Onozato (U. Hyogo),
M. Sasada (Hiroshima U.),
M. Tanaka (Tohoku U.),
Y. Utsumi (Stanford/SLAC),
on behalf of J-GEM collaboration
We report optical follow-up observations for a high probability area of S200224ca (LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration, GCN #27184) with Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) attached to 8.2-m Subaru Telescope. Subaru/HSC has a circular field-of-view of 1.7 deg^2.
We performed HSC-r2 and HSC-z band imaging observations on 2020-02-25 UT. We start the first exposure at 10:43 UT, which corresponds to 12.3 hours after the GW detection. The exposure time per frame was 30 sec. We covered 82.5% of probability region with 60 pointings of the HSC. We revisited each pointing twice in each band. The estimated limiting magnitudes in HSC-r2 and HSC-z band are about 24.8 mag and 23.5 mag, respectively. Detailed analysis is ongoing, and further follow-up observations are planned.
We thank Subaru's staff for making this observation.
The central coordinates of the observed regions are as follows:
JGEM30716 11:40:18.75 -14:28:39.0
JGEM29691 11:34:41.25 -12:01:28.9
JGEM28923 11:31:52.50 -10:11:59.7
JGEM30973 11:43:07.50 -15:05:41.2
JGEM29948 11:37:30.00 -12:38:08.3
JGEM28154 11:29:03.75 -08:23:07.9
JGEM29179 11:34:41.25 -10:48:24.9
JGEM30204 11:40:18.75 -13:14:52.9
JGEM28411 11:31:52.50 -08:59:21.5
JGEM30461 11:43:07.50 -13:51:43.0
JGEM29436 11:37:30.00 -11:24:54.6
JGEM27642 11:29:03.75 -07:10:50.7
JGEM26874 11:26:15.00 -05:22:45.8
JGEM28667 11:34:41.25 -09:35:38.6
JGEM30717 11:45:56.25 -14:28:39.0
JGEM29692 11:40:18.75 -12:01:28.9
JGEM27899 11:31:52.50 -07:46:57.8
JGEM30974 11:48:45.00 -15:05:41.2
JGEM28924 11:37:30.00 -10:11:59.7
JGEM29949 11:43:07.50 -12:38:08.3
JGEM27130 11:29:03.75 -05:58:45.0
JGEM26362 11:26:15.00 -04:10:53.5
JGEM28155 11:34:41.25 -08:23:07.9
JGEM30205 11:45:56.25 -13:14:52.9
JGEM29180 11:40:18.75 -10:48:24.9
JGEM27387 11:31:52.50 -06:34:46.5
JGEM26618 11:29:03.75 -04:46:48.7
JGEM28412 11:37:30.00 -08:59:21.5
JGEM30462 11:48:45.00 -13:51:43.0
JGEM29437 11:43:07.50 -11:24:54.6
JGEM25850 11:26:15.00 -02:59:07.8
JGEM27643 11:34:41.25 -07:10:50.7
JGEM30718 11:51:33.75 -14:28:39.0
JGEM28668 11:40:18.75 -09:35:38.6
JGEM29693 11:45:56.25 -12:01:28.9
JGEM26875 11:31:52.50 -05:22:45.8
JGEM26106 11:29:03.75 -03:34:60.0
JGEM27900 11:37:30.00 -07:46:57.8
JGEM29950 11:48:45.00 -12:38:08.3
JGEM28925 11:43:07.50 -10:11:59.7
JGEM27131 11:34:41.25 -05:58:45.0
JGEM26363 11:31:52.50 -04:10:53.5
JGEM28156 11:40:18.75 -08:23:07.9
JGEM30206 11:51:33.75 -13:14:52.9
JGEM29181 11:45:56.25 -10:48:24.9
JGEM27388 11:37:30.00 -06:34:46.5
JGEM28413 11:43:07.50 -08:59:21.5
JGEM29438 11:48:45.00 -11:24:54.6
JGEM26619 11:34:41.25 -04:46:48.7
JGEM25851 11:31:52.50 -02:59:07.8
JGEM27644 11:40:18.75 -07:10:50.7
JGEM29694 11:51:33.75 -12:01:28.9
JGEM28669 11:45:56.25 -09:35:38.6
JGEM26876 11:37:30.00 -05:22:45.8
JGEM26107 11:34:41.25 -03:34:60.0
JGEM27901 11:43:07.50 -07:46:57.8
JGEM28926 11:48:45.00 -10:11:59.7
JGEM27132 11:40:18.75 -05:58:45.0
JGEM28157 11:45:56.25 -08:23:07.9
JGEM27389 11:43:07.50 -06:34:46.5
GCN Circular 27199
Subject
LIGO/Virgo S200224ca: No counterpart candidates in Fermi-LAT observations
Date
2020-02-25T10:25:01Z (6 years ago)
From
Lorenzo Scotton at CNRS/IN2P3/LUPM <lorenzoscotton@live.it>
M. Crnogorcevic (Univ. of Maryland & NASA/GSFC), L. Scotton (CNRS/IN2P3/LUPM),
N. Di Lalla (Stanford University), M. Axelsson (KTH & Stockholm Univ),
E. Bissaldi (Politecnico & INFN Bari), D. Kocevski (NASA/MSFC),
N. Omodei (Stanford Univ.) and F. Longo (University and INFN, Trieste)
report on behalf of the Fermi-LAT Collaboration:
We have searched data collected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) on
February 24, 2020, for possible high-energy (E > 100 MeV) gamma-ray emission in
spatial/temporal coincidence with the LIGO/Virgo trigger S200224ca (GCN 27184