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Swift-XRT Follow-up of Gravitational Wave Triggers in the Second Advanced LIGO/Virgo Observing Run

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posted on 2019-10-17, 16:24 authored by NJ Klingler, JA Kennea, PA Evans, A Tohuvavohu, SB Cenko, SD Barthelmy, AP Beardmore, AA Breeveld, PJ Brown, DN Burrows, S Campana, G Cusumano, A D'Aì, P D'Avanzo, V D'Elia, MD Pasquale, SWK Emery, J Garcia, P Giommi, C Gronwall, DH Hartmann, HA Krimm, NPM Kuin, A Lien, DB Malesani, FE Marshall, A Melandri, JA Nousek, SR Oates, PT O'Brien, JP Osborne, KL Page, DM Palmer, M Perri, JL Racusin, MH Siegel, T Sakamoto, B Sbarufatti, G Tagliaferri, E Troja
The Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory carried out prompt searches for gravitational wave (GW) events detected by the LIGO/Virgo Collaboration (LVC) during the second observing run (“O2”). Swift performed extensive tiling of eight LVC triggers, two of which had very low false-alarm rates (GW 170814 and the epochal GW 170817), indicating a high confidence of being astrophysical in origin; the latter was the first GW event to have an electromagnetic counterpart detected. In this paper we describe the follow-up performed during O2 and the results of our searches. No GW electromagnetic counterparts were detected; this result is expected, as GW 170817 remained the only astrophysical event containing at least one neutron star after LVC’s later retraction of some events. A number of X-ray sources were detected, with the majority of identified sources being active galactic nuclei. We discuss the detection rate of transient X-ray sources and their implications in the O2 tiling searches. Finally, we describe the lessons learned during O2, and how these are being used to improve the Swift follow-up of GW events. In particular, we simulate a population of GRB afterglows to evaluate our source ranking system’s ability to differentiate them from unrelated and uncatalogued X-ray sources. We find that ≈ 60 − 70% of afterglows whose jets are oriented towards Earth will be given high rank (i.e., “interesting” designation) by the completion of our second follow-up phase (assuming their location in the sky was observed), but that this fraction can be increased to nearly 100% by performing a third follow-up observation of sources exhibiting fading behavior.

Funding

Facility: the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory Software: HEAsoft (v6.22; HEASARC 2014), afterglowpy (v0.6.4; Ryan et al. 2019) NJK would like to acknowledge support from NASA Grant 80NSSC19K0408. PAE, APB, JPO, and KLP acknowledge support from the UK Space Agency. SRO gratefully acknowledges the support of the Leverhulme Trust Early Career Fellowship. The Dark Cosmology Centre was funded by the Danish National Research Foundation. DBM is supported by research grant 19054 from Villum Fonden. AD acknowledges financial contribution from the agreement ASIINAF n.2017-14-H.0. The authors would also like to thank the anonymous referee for their useful suggestions which helped to improve the paper.

History

Citation

The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, Volume 245, Number 1

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING/Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Astrophysical Journal Supplement

Volume

245

Issue

1

Publisher

American Astronomical Society, IOP Publishing

eissn

1538-4365

Acceptance date

2019-10-11

Copyright date

2019

Available date

2019-11-15

Notes

The file associated with this record is under embargo until publication, in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy. The full text may be available through the publisher links provided above.

Language

en

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