A Galaxy-Targeted Search for the Optical Counterpart of the Candidate NS-BH Merger S190814bv with Magellan
S. Gomez, G. Hosseinzadeh, P. S. Cowperthwaite, V. A. Villar, E., Berger, T. Gardner, K. D. Alexander, R. Chornock, M. R. Drout, T. Eftekhari,, W. Fong, K. Gill, R. Margutti, M. Nicholl, K. Paterson, P. K. G. Williams

TL;DR
This study conducted optical follow-up observations of the candidate NS-BH merger S190814bv using Magellan, searching for electromagnetic counterparts within the localization region, but found no definitive counterpart, constraining possible models.
Contribution
First optical follow-up of S190814bv targeting all galaxies in the localization volume, providing constraints on potential electromagnetic counterparts.
Findings
No counterpart detected to limiting magnitude of i=22.2
Ruled out on-axis short GRB jet models
Constrained kilonova and off-axis jet scenarios
Abstract
On 2019 August 14 the Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory (LIGO) and the Virgo gravitational wave interferometer announced the detection of a binary merger, S190814bv, with a low false alarm rate (FAR) of about 1 in years, a distance of Mpc, a 90\% (50\%) localization region of about 23 (5) deg, and a probability of being a neutron star--black hole (NS-BH) merger of . The LIGO/Virgo Collaboration (LVC) defines NS-BH such that the lighter binary member has a mass of M and the more massive one has M, and this classification is in principle consistent with a BH-BH merger depending on the actual upper mass cut-off for neutron stars. Additionally, the LVC designated a probability that the merger led to matter outside the final BH remnant of , suggesting that an electromagnetic (EM) counterpart is…
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