The Gravity Collective: A Search for the Electromagnetic Counterpart to the Neutron Star-Black Hole Merger GW190814
Charles D. Kilpatrick, David A. Coulter, Iair Arcavi, Thomas G. Brink,, Georgios Dimitriadis, Alexei V. Filippenko, Ryan J. Foley, D. Andrew Howell,, David O. Jones, Martin Makler, Anthony L. Piro, C\'esar Rojas-Bravo, David J., Sand, Jonathan J. Swift, Douglas Tucker

TL;DR
This study conducted extensive optical follow-up observations of the GW190814 neutron star-black hole merger, finding no electromagnetic counterparts and constraining the properties of potential kilonovae and gamma-ray burst afterglows.
Contribution
First comprehensive optical follow-up of GW190814, setting limits on electromagnetic counterparts and characterizing their possible properties compared to known transients.
Findings
No likely electromagnetic counterparts found.
Constraints on kilonova brightness and color.
Rules out certain gamma-ray burst afterglow models.
Abstract
We present optical follow-up imaging obtained with the Katzman Automatic Imaging Telescope, Las Cumbres Observatory Global Telescope Network, Nickel Telescope, Swope Telescope, and Thacher Telescope of the LIGO/Virgo gravitational wave (GW) signal from the neutron star-black hole (NSBH) merger GW190814. We searched the GW190814 localization region (19 deg for the 90th percentile best localization), covering a total of 51 deg and 94.6% of the two-dimensional localization region. Analyzing the properties of 189 transients that we consider as candidate counterparts to the NSBH merger, including their localizations, discovery times from merger, optical spectra, likely host-galaxy redshifts, and photometric evolution, we conclude that none of these objects are likely to be associated with GW190814. Based on this finding, we consider the likely optical properties of an…
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