Published April 20, 2021 | Version Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

JAGWAR Prowls LIGO/Virgo O3 Paper I: Radio Search of a Possible Multimessenger Counterpart of the Binary Black Hole Merger Candidate S191216ap

  • 1. ROR icon Texas Tech University
  • 2. ROR icon National Radio Astronomy Observatory
  • 3. ROR icon California Institute of Technology
  • 4. ROR icon University of Sydney
  • 5. ROR icon Australia Telescope National Facility
  • 6. ROR icon ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery
  • 7. ROR icon University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
  • 8. ROR icon Goddard Space Flight Center

Abstract

We present a sensitive search with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array for the radio counterpart of the gravitational wave candidate S191216ap, which is classified as a binary black hole merger and suggested to be a possible multimessenger event, based on the detection of a high-energy neutrino and a TeV photon. We carried out a blind search at C band (4–8 GHz) over 0.3 deg² of the gamma-ray counterpart of S191216ap reported by the High-Altitude Water Cerenkov Observatory (HAWC). Our search, spanning three epochs over 130 days of postmerger and having a mean source-detection threshold of 75 μJy beam⁻¹ (4σ), yielded five variable sources associated with active galactic nucleus activity and no definitive counterpart of S191216ap. We find <2% (3.0% ± 1.3%) of the persistent radio sources at 6 GHz to be variable on a timescale of <1 week (week–months), consistent with previous radio variability studies. Our 4σ radio luminosity upper limit of ~1.2 × 10²⁸ erg s⁻¹ Hz⁻¹ on the afterglow of S191216ap, within the HAWC error region, is 5–10 times deeper than previous binary black hole (BBH) radio afterglow searches. Comparing this upper limit with theoretical expectations given by Perna et al. for putative jets launched by BBH mergers, for on-axis jets with energy ≃10⁴⁹ erg, we can rule out jet opening angles ≾ 20° (assuming that the counterpart lies within the 1σ HAWC region that we observed).

Additional Information

© 2021. The American Astronomical Society. Received 2020 October 16; revised 2021 February 25; accepted 2021 February 26; published 2021 April 19. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. We would like to thank the NRAO staff, especially Amy Mioduszewski, Heidi Medlin, Drew Medlin, Tony Perreault and Abi Smoake for help with observation scheduling and computing. K.P.M. is currently a Jansky Fellow of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory. K.P.M. and G.H. acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation Grant AST-1911199. A.C., A.B., and D.B. acknowledge support from the National Science Foundation via the CAREER grant #1455090. D.K. is supported by NSF grant AST-1816492.

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Published - Bhakta_2021_ApJ_911_77.pdf

Submitted - 2010.15042.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

Eprint ID
108837
Resolver ID
CaltechAUTHORS:20210423-164859157

Related works

Funding

Jansky Fellowship
NSF
AST-1911199
NSF
AST-1455090
NSF
AST-1816492

Dates

Created
2021-04-27
Created from EPrint's datestamp field
Updated
2023-01-19
Created from EPrint's last_modified field

Caltech Custom Metadata

Caltech groups
Astronomy Department