Implications for the Origin of GRB 070201 from LIGO Observations
LIGO Scientific Collaboration, K. Hurley

TL;DR
LIGO data analysis around GRB 070201 suggests it was unlikely caused by a compact binary merger in M31, providing constraints on possible progenitors and gravitational wave emissions.
Contribution
This study presents the first gravitational wave search coincident with GRB 070201, constraining its progenitor and ruling out certain binary merger scenarios in M31.
Findings
No gravitational wave candidates were found.
Binary neutron star merger in M31 is excluded at >99% confidence.
Upper limit on gravitational wave energy emission is established.
Abstract
We analyzed the available LIGO data coincident with GRB 070201, a short duration hard spectrum gamma-ray burst whose electromagnetically determined sky position is coincident with the spiral arms of the Andromeda galaxy (M31). Possible progenitors of such short hard GRBs include mergers of neutron stars or a neutron star and black hole, or soft gamma-ray repeater (SGR) flares. These events can be accompanied by gravitational-wave emission. No plausible gravitational wave candidates were found within a 180 s long window around the time of GRB 070201. This result implies that a compact binary progenitor of GRB 070201, with masses in the range 1 M_sun < m_1 < 3 M_sun and 1 M_sun < m_2 < 40 M_sun, located in M31 is excluded at >99% confidence. Indeed, if GRB 070201 were caused by a binary neutron star merger, we find that D < 3.5 Mpc is excluded, assuming random inclination, at 90%…
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