Observation of the second LIGO/Virgo event connected with binary neutron star merger S190425z in the gamma-ray range
A.S. Pozanenko (1,2), P.Yu. Minaev (1), S.A. Grebenev (1), I.V., Chelovekov (1) ((1) Space Research Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences,, (2) National Research University "High School of Economics")

TL;DR
This paper reports the detection of a gamma-ray burst associated with the second neutron star merger GW event S190425z, using INTEGRAL data, and compares it to the first such event GW170817.
Contribution
It presents the first gamma-ray detection of the S190425z neutron star merger and analyzes its properties in comparison to GW170817.
Findings
Detection of a weak gamma-ray burst GRB190425 linked to S190425z.
GRB190425's profile is similar to GRB170817A from GW170817.
No additional gamma-ray or X-ray signals were detected in the field of view.
Abstract
Observations of the gravitational-wave (GW) event S190425z registered by the LIGO/Virgo detectors with the Anti-Coincidence Shield (ACS) of the gamma-ray spectrometer SPI aboard the INTEGRAL observatory are presented. With a high probability (>99%) it was associated with a neutron star (NS) merger in a close binary system. This is only the second event of such type in the history of GW observations (after GW170817). A weak gamma-ray burst, GRB190425, consisting of two pulses in ~0.5 and ~5.9 s after the NS merging in S190425z was detected by SPI-ACS. The pulses had a priori reliability of 3.5 and 4.4 sigma as single events and 5.5 sigma as a combined event. Analysis of the SPI-ACS count rate history recorded these days (~125 ks in total) has shown that the rate of appearance of two close pulses with characteristics of GRB190425 by chance does not exceed 6.4 x 10^{-5} s^{-1}. We note…
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