Results from the Pan-STARRS Search for Kilonovae: Contamination by Massive Stellar Outbursts
M. D. Fulton, S. J. Smartt, M. E. Huber, K. W. Smith, K. C. Chambers, M. Nicholl, S. Srivastav, D. R. Young, E. A. Magnier, C.-C. Lin, P. Minguez, T. de Boer, T. Lowe, R. Wainscoat

TL;DR
This study analyzes Pan-STARRS data to identify kilonovae, finds that massive stellar outbursts are major contaminants, and suggests photometric methods to distinguish them in gravitational wave follow-up searches.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive assessment of stellar outburst contamination in optical kilonova searches and proposes strategies for photometric identification.
Findings
175 transients within 200 Mpc with M > -16.5 identified
All kilonova candidates eliminated after follow-up
Massive stellar outbursts account for 55% of contaminants
Abstract
We present results from the Pan-STARRS optical search for kilonovae without the aid of gravitational wave and gamma-ray burst triggers. The search was conducted from 26 October 2019 to 15 December 2022. During this time, we reported 29,740 transients observed by Pan-STARRS to the IAU Transient Name Server. Of these, 175 were Pan-STARRS credited discoveries that had a host galaxy within 200 Mpc and had discovery absolute magnitudes M > -16.5. A subset of 11 transients was plausibly identified as kilonova candidates by our kilonova prediction algorithm. Through a combination of historical forced photometry, extensive follow-up, and aggregating observations from multiple sky surveys, we eliminated all as kilonova candidates. Rapidly evolving outbursts from massive stars (likely to be Luminous Blue Variable eruptions) accounted for 55% of the subset's contaminating sources. We estimate the…
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