J-GEM follow-up observations to search for an optical counterpart of the first gravitational wave source GW150914

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Abstract

We present our optical follow-up observations to search for an electromagnetic counterpart of the first gravitational wave source GW150914 in the framework of the Japanese collaboration for Gravitational wave ElectroMagnetic follow-up (J-GEM), which is an observing group utilizing optical and radio telescopes in Japan, as well as in New Zealand, China, South Africa, Chile, and Hawaii. We carried out a wide-field imaging survey with the Kiso Wide Field Camera (KWFC) on the 1.05m Kiso Schmidt telescope in Japan and a galaxy-targeted survey with Tripole5 on the B&C 61cm telescope in New Zealand. Approximately 24 deg2 regions in total were surveyed in i-band with KWFC and 18 nearby galaxies were observed with Tripole5 in g-, r-, and i-bands 4-12 days after the gravitational wave detection. Median 5 σ depths are i 18.9mag for the KWFC data and g 18.9mag, r 18.7mag, and i 18.3mag for the Tripole5 data. The probability for a counterpart to be in the observed area is 1.2% in the initial skymap and 0.1% in the final skymap. We do not find any transient source associated to an external galaxy with spatial offset from its center, which is consistent with the local supernova rate.

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Morokuma, T., Tanaka, M., Asakura, Y., Abe, F., Tristram, P. J., Utsumi, Y., … Yoshida, M. (2016). J-GEM follow-up observations to search for an optical counterpart of the first gravitational wave source GW150914. Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 68(4). https://doi.org/10.1093/pasj/psw061

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