Kilonova Luminosity Function Constraints based on Zwicky Transient Facility Searches for 13 Neutron Star Mergers
Mansi M. Kasliwal, Shreya Anand, Tomas Ahumada, Robert Stein, Ana, Sagues Carracedo, Igor Andreoni, Michael W. Coughlin, Leo P. Singer, Erik C., Kool, Kishalay De, Harsh Kumar, Mouza AlMualla, Yuhan Yao, Mattia Bulla,, Dougal Dobie, Simeon Reusch, Daniel A. Perley

TL;DR
This study conducted a systematic search for optical counterparts to 13 neutron star merger gravitational wave events using ZTF, constraining the kilonova luminosity function and finding no promising detections, thus setting limits on kilonova brightness and properties.
Contribution
First comprehensive search for kilonovae associated with multiple GW triggers, providing constraints on their luminosity function and physical parameters based on non-detections.
Findings
No promising kilonova detections in the sample.
Less than 57-89% of kilonovae could be brighter than -16.6 mag.
Constraints on kilonova ejecta mass and lanthanide fraction.
Abstract
We present a systematic search for optical counterparts to 13 gravitational wave (GW) triggers involving at least one neutron star during LIGO/Virgo's third observing run. We searched binary neutron star (BNS) and neutron star black hole (NSBH) merger localizations with the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and undertook follow-up with the Global Relay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen (GROWTH) collaboration. The GW triggers had a median localization of 4480 deg^2, median distance of 267 Mpc and false alarm rates ranging from 1.5 to 1e-25 per yr. The ZTF coverage had a median enclosed probability of 39%, median depth of 20.8mag, and median response time of 1.5 hr. The O3 follow-up by the GROWTH team comprised 340 UVOIR photometric points, 64 OIR spectra, and 3 radio. We find no promising kilonova (radioactivity-powered counterpart) and we convert the upper limits to constrain…
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