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TOROS optical follow-up of the advanced LIGO–VIRGO O2 second observational campaign

Authors :
T. Ribeiro
Richard Camuccio
C. Quiñones
José Franco
Antonio Kanaan
Americo F Hinojosa
R. Vrech
Amelia Cristina Ramirez Rivera
Omar López-Cruz
Darren L. DePoy
William Schoenell
Rodolfo Artola
Emmanuel Ríos-López
Adam Zadrożny
Manuel Starck
Horacio Rodriguez
José Luis Nilo Castellón
Marina Tornatore
Wahltyn Rattray
Diego G. Lambas
B. Sanchez
Ervin Vilchis
Darío Graña
H. Cuevas
Moises Castillo
D. Fernández
C. Girardini
Alejandro F Hinojosa
Andrea Hinojosa
S. Torres-Flores
Jennifer L. Marshall
Marcelo Lares
M. Schneiter
Antonio Chiavassa Ferreyra
Aldo Fonrouge
V. H. Chavushyan
Nelson Padilla
Deborah Dultzin
Sebastián Gurovich
Luis Tapia
V. Renzi
Wendy Mendoza
Mario C. Díaz
Victor Haber Perez
T. Penuela
M. Beroiz
Lucas M. Macri
C. Colazo
Raul Melia
Mariano Dominguez
Juan B. Cabral
Source :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 493:2207-2214
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020.

Abstract

We present the results of the optical follow-up, conducted by the TOROS collaboration, of gravitational wave events detected during the Advanced LIGO-Virgo second observing run (Nov 2016 -- Aug 2017). Given the limited field of view ($\sim100\arcmin$) of our observational instrumentation we targeted galaxies within the area of high localization probability that were observable from our sites. We analyzed the observations using difference imaging, followed by a Random Forest algorithm to discriminate between real and bogus transients. For all three events that we respond to, except GW170817, we did not find any bona fide optical transient that was plausibly linked with the observed gravitational wave event. Our observations were conducted using telescopes at Estaci\'{o}n Astrof\'{\i}sica de Bosque Alegre, Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, and the Dr. Cristina V. Torres Memorial Astronomical Observatory. Our results are consistent with the LIGO-Virgo detections of a binary black hole merger (GW170104) for which no electromagnetic counterparts were expected, as well as a binary neutron star merger (GW170817) for which an optical transient was found as expected.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures

Details

ISSN :
13652966 and 00358711
Volume :
493
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....13a1fee1c5fbc1dece88a3fc549445f1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz3634