TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 25204 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S190728q: Pan-STARRS detection of the transient AT2019lvs/ZTF19abjethn 18hrs before S190728q DATE: 19/07/28 18:13:31 GMT FROM: Stephen Smartt at Queen's U/Belfast S. J. Smartt, K. W. Smith (QUB), M. Huber, K. Chambers (IfA), D. R. Young, S. Srivastav, O. McBrien, J. Gillanders, D. O'Neil, P. Clark, S. Sim (QUB), T. de Boer, J. Bulger, J. Fairlamb, C.-C. Lin, T. Lowe, E. Magnier A. Schultz, R. J. Wainscoat, M. Willman (IfA, University of Hawaii), A. Rest (STScI), C. Stubbs (Harvard) We imaged part of the localisation map of the gravitational wave S190728q (GCN 25187) with Pan-STARRS1 (Chambers et al. 2016, arXiv:1612.05560C) on the night preceding the detection (GW detection at 58692.28137188518) during routine survey observations. This coverage included the location of the ZTF reported optical transient AT2019lvs (ZTF19abjethn; Kasliwal et al. GCN 25199). Pan-STARRS observed in the NEO sequence of 45s x 4 in the wide gri-composite filter w-band. Images were processed with the IPP (Magnier et al. 2016, arXiv:1612.05240) and the w-band reference sky frame was subtracted during normal processing. We detected a transient source (PS19dwa) in all four difference images. In 2 images it is formally below 5-sigma but visually detected. The 2 other images have 5-sigma detections at AB magnitudes : MJD w w_err 58691.544552 22.27 0.22 58691.531772 22.01 0.20 At position: RA = 326.39543 (21:45:34.90) DEC = +20.69064 (+20:41:26.3) This is coincident with the ZTF coordinates to 0.2 arcsec, and hence is almost certainly the same object. Therefore this optical transient is detected 18 hours before S190728q. There are no other detections of transient flux at this position in about 30 epochs of Pan-STARRS grizy imaging over the last 2000 days in our detection database. AT2019lvs is coincident with a blue source (SDSS J214534.91+204126.2) in SDSS and Pan-STARRS and DECaLs (Dey et al. 2019, DR7 as reported in Zhou et al. GCN 25201). The object is detected only in the g-band in SDSS and PS1 surveys (SDSS g = 22.57 +/- 0.14). It is uncertain if it is stellar or a faint blue galaxy in all three surveys. It is more likely to be associated with this faint source than the brighter host at photoz - 0.23 reported by Zhou et al. (GCN 25201) and Kasliwal et al. (GCN 25199). A foreground variable or CV is the most likely explanation, but a more exotic explanation and association with S190728q can't be ruled out and a classification or redshift is essential.