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ASAS-SN follow-up of IceCube high-energy neutrino alerts

Authors :
Necker, Jannis
de Jaeger, Thomas
Stein, Robert
Franckowiak, Anna
Shappee, Benjamin J.
Kowalski, Marek
Kochanek, Christopher S.
Stanek, Krzysztof Z.
Beacom, John F.
Desai, Dhvanil D.
Neumann, Kyle
Jayasinghe, Tharindu
Holoien, T. W. -S.
Thompson, Todd A.
Holmbo, Simon
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report on the search for optical counterparts to IceCube neutrino alerts released between April 2016 and August 2021 with the All-Sky Automated Survey for SuperNovae (ASAS-SN). Despite the discovery of a diffuse astrophysical high-energy neutrino flux in 2013, the source of those neutrinos remains largely unknown. Since 2016, IceCube has published likely-astrophysical neutrinos as public realtime alerts. Through a combination of normal survey and triggered target-of-opportunity observations, ASAS-SN obtained images within 1 hour of the neutrino detection for 20% (11) of all observable IceCube alerts and within one day for another 57% (32). For all observable alerts, we obtained images within at least two weeks from the neutrino alert. ASAS-SN provides the only optical follow-up for about 17% of IceCube's neutrino alerts. We recover the two previously claimed counterparts to neutrino alerts, the flaring-blazar TXS 0506+056 and the tidal disruption event AT2019dsg. We investigate the light curves of previously-detected transients in the alert footprints, but do not identify any further candidate neutrino sources. We also analysed the optical light curves of Fermi 4FGL sources coincident with high-energy neutrino alerts, but do not identify any contemporaneous flaring activity. Finally, we derive constraints on the luminosity functions of neutrino sources for a range of assumed evolution models.

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2204.00500
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac2261