TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 24235 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S190426c: HAWC follow-up DATE: 19/04/26 16:34:47 GMT FROM: Hugo Ayala at Pennsylvania State University The HAWC Collaboration (https://www.hawc-observatory.org) reports: The HAWC Collaboration performed a follow-up of the gravitational wave trigger S190426c. At the time of the trigger, the HAWC local zenith was oriented towards (RA, Dec) = (347.3 deg, 18.9 deg). 28% of the GW candidate sky location probability fell within our observable field of view (0-45 deg zenith angle). We performed a search for a short timescale emission using 6 sliding time windows (dt = 0.3s, 1s, 3s, 10s, 30s and 100s), shifted forward in time by 20% of their width. We searched the 95% probability containment area in a timescale-dependent time period, from t0-5dt to t0+10dt, where t0 is the time of the GW trigger. No significant gamma-ray detection above the background was observed. The sensitivity of this analysis is greatly dependent on zenith angle, ranging from 33.8 deg to 45.0 deg for the area searched in this analysis. The 5sigma detection sensitivity to a 1s (100s) burst in the 80-800GeV energy range goes from 1.2e-05 erg/cm^2 to 1.1e-04 erg/cm^2 (5.7e-05 erg/cm^2 to 5.0e-04 erg/cm^2), depending on the zenith angle. HAWC is a TeV gamma-ray water Cherenkov array located in the state of Puebla, Mexico. It is sensitive to the energy range ~0.1-100TeV, and monitors 2/3 of the sky every day with an instantaneous field-of-view of ~2 sr.