J-GEM Follow-Up Observations of The Gravitational Wave Source GW151226
Michitoshi Yoshida, Yousuke Utsumi, Nozomu Tominaga, Tomoki Morokuma,, Masaomi Tanaka, Yuichiro Asakura, Kazuya Matsubayashi, Kouji Ohta, Fumio Abe,, Sho Chimasu, Hisanori Furusawa, Ryosuke Itoh, Yoichi Itoh, Yuka Kanda, Koji, S. Kawabata, Miho Kawabata, Shintaro Koshida

TL;DR
This paper reports comprehensive optical and infrared follow-up observations of the GW151226 event, covering nearly 987 deg$^2$ and detecting numerous transients, but no associated counterparts were identified.
Contribution
First extensive multi-telescope follow-up campaign of GW151226, covering broad sky areas and multiple wavelengths, providing valuable data and constraints on electromagnetic counterparts.
Findings
Detected 13 supernova candidates and 60 extragalactic transients.
Covered 986.5 deg$^2$ with an integrated probability of 29%.
No transients associated with GW151226 were found.
Abstract
We report the results of optical--infrared follow-up observations of the gravitational wave (GW) event GW151226 detected by the Advanced LIGO in the framework of J-GEM (Japanese collaboration for Gravitational wave ElectroMagnetic follow-up). We performed wide-field optical imaging surveys with Kiso Wide Field Camera (KWFC), Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC), and MOA-cam3. The KWFC survey started at 2.26 days after the GW event and covered 778 deg centered at the high Galactic region of the skymap of GW151226. We started the HSC follow-up observations from 12 days after the event and covered an area of 63.5 deg of the highest probability region of the northern sky with the limiting magnitudes of 24.6 and 23.8 for i band and z band, respectively. MOA-cam3 covered 145 deg of the skymap with MOA-red filter 2.5 months after the GW alert. Total area covered by the wide-field surveys was…
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