Swift-XRT Follow-up of Gravitational-wave Triggers in the Second Advanced LIGO/Virgo Observing Run
Date
2019Author
Campana, S.
D'Avanzo, P.
D'Elia, V
Emery, S. W. K.
Garcia, J.
Giommi, P.
Gronwall, C.
Hartmann, D. H.
Krimm, H. A.
Kuin, N. P. M.
Lien, A.
Malesani, D. B.
Marshall, F. E.
Melandri, A.
Nousek, J. A.
Oates, S. R.
O'Brien, P. T.
Osborne, J. P.
Page, K. L.
Palmer, D. M.
Perri, M.
Racusin, J. L.
Siegel, M. H.
Sakamoto, T.
Sbarufatti, B.
Tagliaferri, G.
Troja, E.
de Pasquale, M.
Klingler, N. J.
Kennea, J. A.
Evans, P. A.
Tohuvavohu, A.
Cenko, S. B.
Barthelmy, S. D.
Beardmore, A. P.
Breeveld, A. A.
Brown, P. J.
Burrows, D. N.
Cusumano, G.
D'Ai, A.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
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 (GW170814 and the epochal GW170817), 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 GW170817 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 gamma-ray burst afterglows to evaluate our source ranking system?s ability to differentiate them from unrelated and uncataloged X-ray sources. We find that 60%?70% of afterglows whose jets are oriented toward Earth will be given high rank (i.e., ?interesting? designation) by the completion of our second follow-up phase (assuming that 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.
Collections
- Makale [92796]