Abstract

Gravitational wave (GW) events have several possible progenitors, including black hole mergers, cosmic string cusps, supernovae, neutron star mergers, and black hole–neutron star mergers. A subset of GW events are expected to produce electromagnetic (EM) emission that, once detected, will provide complementary information about their astrophysical context. To that end, the LIGO-Virgo Collaboration has partnered with other teams to send GW candidate alerts so that searches for their EM counterparts can be pursued. One such partner is the Dark Energy Survey (DES) and Dark Energy Camera (DECam) Gravitational Waves Program (DES-GW). Situated on the 4m Blanco Telescope at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, DECam is an ideal instrument for optical followup observations of GW triggers in the southern sky. The DES-GW program performs subtraction of new search images with respect to preexisting overlapping images to select candidate sources. Due to the short decay timescale of the expected EM counterparts and the need to quickly eliminate survey areas with no counterpart candidates, it is critical to complete the initial analysis of each night’s images within 24 hours. The computational challenges in achieving this goal include maintaining robust I/O pipelines during the processing, being able to quickly acquire template images of new sky regions outside of the typical DES observing regions, and being able to rapidly provision additional batch computing resources with little advance notice. We will discuss the search area determination, imaging pipeline, general data transfer strategy, and methods to quickly increase the available amount of batch computing. We will present results from the first season of observations from September 2015 to January 2016 and conclude by presenting improvements planned for the second observing season.

Highlights

  • The detection of gravitation waves (GW) by the LIGO-Virgo Collaboration (LVC) [1] has ushered in a new era of astronomy

  • We performed two analyses on GW150914 [11, 12]; one was a search for EM counterparts to the GW signal, and the other was a search for disappearing stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud, as GW events can come from a stellar core collapse with a failed supernova, and the stellar-rich LMC was inside the LIGO probability map

  • A large fraction of the diffimg processing was performed on local campus resources for the second event and compared with the grid runs. These searches demonstrate the ability of the Dark Energy Survey (DES)-GW program to quickly get on sky and perform a detailed EM counterpart searches

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Summary

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Introduction
Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
Search program for bright gravitational wave sources
The resulting gaussian is normalized
Full Text
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