Fast-transient Searches in Real Time with ZTFReST: Identification of Three Optically-discovered Gamma-ray Burst Afterglows and New Constraints on the Kilonova Rate
Igor Andreoni, Michael W. Coughlin, Erik C. Kool, Mansi M. Kasliwal,, Harsh Kumar, Varun Bhalerao, Ana Sagu\'es Carracedo, Anna Y. Q. Ho, Peter T., H. Pang, Divita Saraogi, Kritti Sharma, Vedant Shenoy, Eric Burns, Tom\'as, Ahumada, Shreya Anand, Leo P. Singer, Daniel A. Perley

TL;DR
This paper presents ZTFReST, a real-time search infrastructure for fast optical transients in ZTF data, successfully identifying several extragalactic transients and constraining kilonova rates without detecting any kilonovae.
Contribution
Introduction of ZTFReST, an open-source system for real-time detection and follow-up of fast transients, including kilonova candidates, in ZTF survey data.
Findings
Detected multiple extragalactic fast transients, including supernovae and gamma-ray burst afterglows.
No kilonovae were found, constraining their rate to less than 900 Gpc$^{-3}$ yr$^{-1}$.
Demonstrated the potential of ZTFReST for future kilonova discovery with upcoming observatories.
Abstract
While optical surveys regularly discover slow transients like supernovae on their own, the most common way to discover extragalactic fast transients, fading away in a few nights, is via follow-up observations of gamma-ray burst and gravitational-wave triggers. However, wide-field surveys have the potential to also identify rapidly fading transients independently of such external triggers. The volumetric survey speed of the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) makes it sensitive to faint and fast-fading objects as kilonovae, the optical counterparts to binary neutron stars and neutron star-black hole mergers, out to almost 200Mpc. We introduce an open-source software infrastructure, the ZTF REaltime Search and Triggering, ZTFReST, designed to identify kilonovae and fast optical transients in ZTF data. Using the ZTF alert stream combined with forced photometry, we have implemented automated…
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