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Limits on the ejecta mass during the search for kilonovae associated with neutron star-black hole mergers: A case study of S230518h, GW230529, S230627c and the low-significance candidate S240422ed

M. PillasLiege UniversityS. AntierIJCLabK. AckleyUniversity of WarwickTomás AhumadaCalifornia Institute of TechnologyDalya AklAmerican University of SharjahLeandro de AlmeidaLaboratório Nacional de AstrofísicaShreya AnandCalifornia Institute of TechnologyCristina AndradeUniversity of MinnesotaIgor AndreoniUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel HillK. A. BostroemUniversity of ArizonaMattia BullaINFN, Sezione di FerraraEric BurnsLouisiana State UniversityTomás CabreraCarnegie Mellon UniversitySeo-Won ChangSeoul National UniversityHoseung ChoiSeoul National UniversityBrendan O’ConnorCarnegie Mellon UniversityM. W. CoughlinUniversity of MinnesotaW. J. B. CorradiLaboratório Nacional de AstrofísicaA. R. GibbsUniversity of ArizonaTim DietrichMax Planck Institute for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute)D. DornicAix Marseille UnivJ.-G. DucoinAix Marseille UnivPierre-Alexandre DuverneUniversité Paris CitéH.-B. EggensteinVolkssternwarte PaderbornM FreebergHidden Valley Observatory(HVO)M. DyerUniversity of SheffieldMichael FausnaughMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyWen‐fai FongFrançois FoucartUniversity of New HampshireDanielle FrostigCenter for Astrophysics Harvard and SmithsonianNidhal GuessoumAmerican University of SharjahVaidehi GuptaUniversity of MinnesotaPatrice HelloIJCLabGriffin HosseinzadehUniversity of ArizonaLei HuCarnegie Mellon UniversityThomas Hussenot-DesenongesIJCLabMyungshin ImSeoul National UniversityRahul JayaramanMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyM. JeongSeoul National UniversityViraj KarambelkarCalifornia Institute of TechnologyM. M. KasliwalCalifornia Institute of TechnologyS. KimSeoul National UniversityC. D. KilpatrickN. KochiashviliE. Kharadze Georgian National Astrophysical ObservatoryС. КарповFZU—Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of SciencesKeerthi KunnumkaiCarnegie Mellon UniversityM. LamoureuxUniversité Catholique de LouvainChung‐Uk LeeKorea Astronomy and Space Science InstituteNathan P. LourieMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyJ. LymanUniversity of WarwickM. MašekFZU—Institute of Physics of the Czech Academy of SciencesFrancesca MagnaniAix Marseille UnivGeoffrey MoMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyM. MolhamNational Research Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics (NRIAG)A. NitzSyracuse UniversityM. NichollQueens University BelfastFelipe NavareteSOAR Telescope/NSF’s NOIRLabK. NoysenaNational Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (Public Organization)Desmond O’NeillUniversity of WarwickGregory S. H. PaekSeoul National UniversityA. PalmeseCarnegie Mellon UniversityR. PoggianiUniversita di PisaT. PradierUniversité de StrasbourgO. PyshnaAstronomical Observatory Taras Shevshenko National University of KyivY RajabovUlugh Beg Astronomical InstituteJillian RastinejadDavid SandUniversity of ArizonaP. ShawhanUniversity of MarylandManisha ShresthaUniversity of ArizonaRobert A. SimcoeMassachusetts Institute of TechnologyStephen SmarttQueens University BelfastD. SteeghsUniversity of WarwickRobert SteinJoint Space-Science InstituteH. F. StevanceUniversity of OxfordA. TakeyNational Research Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics (NRIAG)Ming SunNational Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (Public Organization)Andrew ToivonenUniversity of MinnesotaD. TurpinUniversité Paris CitéK. UlaczykUniversity of WarwickA. WoldCalifornia Institute of TechnologyThibeau WoutersNikhef
ABI

Аннотация

Neutron star-black hole (NSBH) mergers, detectable via their gravitational-wave (GW) emission, are expected to produce kilonovae (KNe). Four NSBH candidates have been identified and followed-up by more than fifty instruments since the start of the fourth GW observing run (O4), in May 2023, up to July 2024; however, no confirmed associated KN has been detected. This study evaluates ejecta properties from multimessenger observations to understand the absence of detectable KN: we use GW public information and joint observations taken from 05.2023 to 07.2024 (LVK, ATLAS, DECam, GECKO, GOTO, GRANDMA, SAGUARO, TESS, WINTER, ZTF). First, our analysis on follow-up observation strategies shows that, on average, more than 50% of the simulated KNe associated with NSBH mergers reach their peak luminosity around one day after merger in the $g$, $r$, $i$- bands, which is not necessarily covered for each NSBH GW candidate. We also analyze the trade-off between observation efficiency and the intrinsic properties of the KN emission, to understand the impact on how these constraints affect our ability to detect the KN, and underlying ejecta properties for each GW candidate. In particular, we can only confirm the kilonova was not missed for 1% of the GW230529 and S230627c sky localization region, given the large sky localization error of GW230529 and the large distance for S230627c and, their respective KN faint luminosities. More constraining, for S230518h, we infer the dynamical ejecta and postmerger disk wind ejecta ${m}_{\mathrm{dyn}},{m}_{\mathrm{wind}}<0.03{M}_{\ensuremath{\bigodot}}$ and the viewing angle $\ensuremath{\theta}>25\ifmmode^\circ\else\textdegree\fi{}$. Similarly, the nonastrophysical origin of S240422ed is likely further confirmed by the fact that we would have detected even a faint KN at the time and presumed distance of the S240422ed event candidate, within a minimum 45% credible region of the sky area, that can be larger depending on the KN scenario.

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