James Webb Space Telescope can Detect Kilonovae in Gravitational Wave Follow-up Search
Imre Bartos (Columbia), Tracy L. Huard (Maryland), Szabolcs Marka, (Columbia)

TL;DR
The paper demonstrates that JWST's NIRCam can effectively detect kilonovae within 200 Mpc following gravitational wave events, enabling targeted, efficient follow-up observations despite field-of-view limitations.
Contribution
It introduces a feasible strategy for detecting kilonovae with JWST, optimizing survey time and coverage based on GW localization and galaxy properties.
Findings
NIRCam can detect kilonovae within 200 Mpc in under 12 seconds.
Targeted galaxy surveys can significantly reduce observation time.
Surveying 50% confidence regions is more efficient without losing detection likelihood.
Abstract
Kilonovae represent an important electromagnetic counterpart for compact binary mergers, which could become the most commonly detected gravitational wave (GW) source. Follow-up observations, triggered by GW events, of kilonovae are nevertheless difficult due to poor localization by GW detectors and due to their faint near-infrared peak emission that has limited observational capability. We show that the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam) on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) will be able to detect kilonovae within the relevant GW-detection range of 200 Mpc in short ( 12-second) exposure times for a week following the merger. Despite this sensitivity, a kilonova search fully covering a fiducial localized area of will not be viable with NIRCam due to its limited field of view. However, targeted surveys may be developed to optimize the likelihood of…
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