GROWTH on S190814bv: Deep Synoptic Limits on the Optical/Near-Infrared Counterpart to a Neutron Star-Black Hole Merger
Igor Andreoni, Daniel A. Goldstein, Mansi M. Kasliwal, Peter E., Nugent, Rongpu Zhou, Jeffrey A. Newman, Mattia Bulla, Francois Foucart, Kenta, Hotokezaka, Ehud Nakar, Samaya Nissanke, Geert Raaijmakers, Joshua S. Bloom,, Kishalay De, Jacob E. Jencson, Charlotte Ward

TL;DR
This study conducted deep optical and near-infrared observations following the neutron star-black hole merger candidate S190814bv, but found no counterpart, thereby setting limits on ejecta mass and constraining black hole spin parameters.
Contribution
The paper provides the first deep, systematic optical follow-up of a neutron star-black hole merger candidate, establishing limits on electromagnetic emission and physical parameters of the system.
Findings
No optical counterpart detected despite extensive follow-up.
Ejecta mass constrained to less than 0.04 solar masses for certain viewing angles.
Constraints placed on black hole spin, with c < 0.7 for specific mass ratios.
Abstract
On 2019 August 14, the Advanced LIGO and Virgo interferometers detected the high-significance gravitational wave (GW) signal S190814bv. The GW data indicated that the event resulted from a neutron star--black hole (NSBH) merger, or potentially a low-mass binary black hole merger. Due to the low false alarm rate and the precise localization (23 deg at 90\%), S190814bv presented the community with the best opportunity yet to directly observe an optical/near-infrared counterpart to a NSBH merger. To search for potential counterparts, the GROWTH collaboration performed real-time image subtraction on 6 nights of public Dark Energy Camera (DECam) images acquired in the three weeks following the merger, covering 98\% of the localization probability. Using a worldwide network of follow-up facilities, we systematically undertook spectroscopy and imaging of optical counterpart candidates.…
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