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An Infrared Search for Kilonovae with the WINTER Telescope. I. Binary Neutron Star Mergers

Authors :
Frostig, Danielle
Biscoveanu, Sylvia
Mo, Geoffrey
Karambelkar, Viraj
Canton, Tito Dal
Chen, Hsin-Yu
Kasliwal, Mansi
Katsavounidis, Erik
Lourie, Nathan P.
Simcoe, Robert A.
Vitale, Salvatore
Source :
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 926, Number 2, Page 152, 2022
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Wide-Field Infrared Transient Explorer (WINTER) is a new 1 $\text{deg}^2$ seeing-limited time-domain survey instrument designed for dedicated near-infrared follow-up of kilonovae from binary neutron star (BNS) and neutron star-black hole mergers. WINTER will observe in the near-infrared Y, J, and short-H bands (0.9-1.7 microns, to $\text{J}_{AB}=21$ magnitudes) on a dedicated 1-meter telescope at Palomar Observatory. To date, most prompt kilonova follow-up has been in optical wavelengths; however, near-infrared emission fades more slowly and depends less on geometry and viewing angle than optical emission. We present an end-to-end simulation of a follow-up campaign during the fourth observing run (O4) of the LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA interferometers, including simulating 625 BNS mergers, their detection in gravitational waves, low-latency and full parameter estimation skymaps, and a suite of kilonova lightcurves from two different model grids. We predict up to five new kilonovae independently discovered by WINTER during O4, given a realistic BNS merger rate. Using a larger grid of kilonova parameters, we find that kilonova emission is $\approx$2 times longer-lived and red kilonovae are detected $\approx$1.5 times further in the infrared than in the optical. For 90% localization areas smaller than 150 (450) $\rm{deg}^{2}$, WINTER will be sensitive to more than 10% of the kilonova model grid out to 350 (200) Mpc. We develop a generalized toolkit to create an optimal BNS follow-up strategy with any electromagnetic telescope and present WINTER's observing strategy with this framework. This toolkit, all simulated gravitational-wave events, and skymaps are made available for use by the community.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, published in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 926, Number 2, Page 152, 2022
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2110.01622
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac4508