//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26731 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Global MASTER-Net observations report DATE: 20/01/14 02:24:23 GMT FROM: Vladimir Lipunov at Moscow State U/Krylov Obs V. Lipunov, E. Gorbovskoy, V.Kornilov, N.Tyurina, P.Balanutsa, A.Kuznetsov, F.Balakin, V.Vladimirov, D. Vlasenko, I.Gorbunov, D.Zimnukhov, V.Senik, T.Pogrosheva, D.Kuvshinov, D. Cheryasov (Lomonosov Moscow State University, SAI, Physics Department), R. Podesta, C.Lopez, F. Podesta, C.Francile (Observatorio Astronomico Felix Aguilar OAFA), H.Levato (Instituto de Ciencias Astronomicas, de la Tierra y del Espacio ICATE), R. Rebolo, M. Serra (The Instituto de Astrofisica de Canarias), D. Buckley (South African Astronomical Observatory), O.A. Gres, N.M. Budnev, O.Ershova (Irkutsk State University, API), A. Tlatov, D. Dormidontov (Kislovodsk Solar Station of the Pulkovo Observatory), V. Yurkov, A. Gabovich, Yu. Sergienko (Blagoveschensk Educational State University) MASTER-OAFA robotic telescope (Global MASTER-Net: http://observ.pereplet.ru, Lipunov et al., 2010, Advances in Astronomy, vol. 2010, 30L) located in Argentina (OAFA observatory of San Juan National University) started inspect of the LIGO/Virgo S200114f errorbox 380 sec after trigger time at 2020-01-14 02:14:38 UT, with upper limit up to 18.2 mag. The observations began at zenith distance = 58 deg. The sun altitude is -26.5 deg. MASTER-Kislovodsk robotic telescope located in Russia (Lomonosov MSU, Kislovodsk Solar Station of Pulkovo observatory) started inspect of the LIGO/Virgo S200114f errorbox 381 sec after trigger time at 2020-01-14 02:14:39 UT, with upper limit up to 17.5 mag. The observations began at zenith distance = 69 deg. The sun altitude is -26.1 deg. The galactic latitude b = -60 deg., longitude l = 98 deg. Real time updated cover map and OT discovered available here: https://master.sai.msu.ru/site/master2/ligo_1.php?id=11224 We obtain a following upper limits. Tmid-T0 | Date Time | Site | Coord (J2000) |Filt.| Expt. | Limit| Comment _________|_____________________|_____________________|____________________________________|_____|_______|_______|________ 421 | 2020-01-14 02:14:38 | MASTER-OAFA | (07h 21m 28.46s , +17d 44m 04.5s) | C | 80 | 18.3 | 421 | 2020-01-14 02:14:39 | MASTER-Kislovodsk | (07h 28m 48.40s , +16d 54m 16.5s) | C | 80 | 17.4 | 421 | 2020-01-14 02:14:39 | MASTER-Kislovodsk | (07h 20m 31.03s , +17d 20m 26.8s) | C | 80 | 17.3 | 527 | 2020-01-14 02:16:19 | MASTER-Kislovodsk | (07h 28m 45.30s , +16d 53m 07.0s) | C | 90 | 17.5 | 527 | 2020-01-14 02:16:19 | MASTER-Kislovodsk | (07h 20m 28.19s , +17d 19m 14.5s) | C | 90 | 17.4 | Filter C is a clear (unfiltred) band. The observation and reduction will continue. The message may be cited. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26732 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Upper limits from IceCube neutrino searches DATE: 20/01/14 02:51:01 GMT FROM: Alex Pizzuto at ICECUBE/U of Wisconsin IceCube Collaboration (http://icecube.wisc.edu/) reports: Searches [1,2] for track-like muon neutrino events detected by IceCube consistent with the sky localization of gravitational-wave candidate S200114f in a time range of 1000 seconds [3] centered on the alert event time (2020-01-14 01:59:58.239 UTC to 2020-01-14 02:16:38.239 UTC) have been performed. During this time period IceCube was collecting good quality data. No significant track-like events are found in spatial coincidence of S200114f calculated from the map circulated in the 2-Preliminary notice. IceCube's sensitivity assuming an E^-2 spectrum (E^2 dN/dE) to neutrino point sources within the locations spanned by the 90% spatial containment of S200114f ranges from 0.029 to 0.583 GeV cm^-2 in a 1000 second time window. The IceCube Neutrino Observatory is a cubic-kilometer neutrino detector operating at the geographic South Pole, Antarctica. The IceCube realtime alert point of contact can be reached at roc@icecube.wisc.edu [1] Bartos et al. arXiv:1810.11467 (2018) and Countryman et al.arXiv:1901.05486 (2019) [2] PoS(ICRC2019)918 and Braun et al., Astroparticle Physics 29, 299 (2008) [3] Baret et al., Astroparticle Physics 35, 1 (2011) //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26733 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: No counterpart candidates in HAWC observations DATE: 20/01/14 03:02:17 GMT FROM: Israel Martinez-Castellanos at UMD/HAWC The HAWC Collaboration (https://www.hawc-observatory.org) reports: The HAWC Collaboration performed a follow-up of the gravitational wave trigger S200114f. At the time of the trigger the HAWC local zenith was oriented towards (RA, Dec) = (47.5 deg, 18.9 deg). 11% 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 26.1 deg to 45 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 4.0e-6 erg/cm^2 to 1.1e-4 erg/cm^2 (2.0e-5 erg/cm^2 to 5.0e-4 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. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26734 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Identification of a GW unmodeled transient candidate DATE: 20/01/14 03:24:22 GMT FROM: Deep Chatterjee at University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration report: We identified the unmodeled transient candidate S200114f during real- time processing of data from LIGO Hanford Observatory (H1), LIGO Livingston Observatory (L1), and Virgo Observatory (V1) at 2020-01-14 02:08:18.239 UTC (GPS time: 1263002916.239). The candidate was found by the CWB [1] analysis pipeline with a version of the search called IMBH. This name is not a classification of the candidate. S200114f is an event of interest because its false alarm rate, as estimated by the online analysis, is 1.2e-09 Hz, or about one in 25 years. The event's properties can be found at this URL: https://gracedb.ligo.org/superevents/S200114f Two sky maps are available at this time and can be retrieved from the GraceDB event page: * cWB.fits.gz,1, an initial localization generated by cWB, distributed via GCN notice about 5 minutes after the candidate event time. * cWB.fits.gz,3 -- this is identical to cWB.fits.gz,1 The preferred sky map at this time is cWB.fits.gz,3. For the cWB.fits.gz,3 sky map, the 90% credible region is 403 deg2. For further information about analysis methodology and the contents of this alert, refer to the LIGO/Virgo Public Alerts User Guide . [1] Klimenko et al. PRD 93, 042004 (2016) //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26738 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Coverage and upper limits from MAXI/GSC observations DATE: 20/01/14 04:34:49 GMT FROM: Hitoshi Negoro at Nihon U H. Negoro (Nihon U.), N. Kawai (Tokyo Tech), S. Sugita, M. Serino (AGU), M. Nakajima, W. Maruyama, M. Aoki, K. Kobayashi, R. Takagi (Nihon U.), T. Mihara, C. Guo, Y. Zhou, T. Tamagawa, M. Matsuoka (RIKEN), T. Sakamoto, H. Nishida, A. Yoshida (AGU), Y. Tsuboi, W. Iwakiri, R. Sasaki, H. Kawai, T. Sato (Chuo U.), M. Shidatsu (Ehime U.), M. Oeda, K. Shiraishi (Tokyo Tech), S. Nakahira, Y. Sugawara, S. Ueno, H. Tomida, M. Ishikawa, R. Shimomukai, M. Tominaga (JAXA), Y. Ueda, A. Tanimoto, S. Yamada, S. Ogawa, K. Setoguchi, T. Yoshitake (Kyoto U.), H. Tsunemi, T. Yoneyama, K. Asakura, S. Ide (Osaka U.), M. Yamauchi, S. Iwahori, Y. Kurihara, K. Kurogi, K. Miike (Miyazaki U.), T. Kawamuro (NAOJ), K. Yamaoka (Nagoya U.), Y. Kawakubo (LSU), M. Sugizaki (NAOC) report on behalf of the MAXI team: We examined MAXI/GSC all-sky X-ray images (2-20 keV) after the LVC trigger S200114f at 2020-01-14 02:08:18.239 UTC (GCN 26734). At the trigger time of S200114f, the high-voltage of MAXI/GSC was off, and it was turned on at T0+653 sec (+10.9 min). The first one-orbit (92 min) scan observation with GSC after the event covered 100% of the 90% credible region of the cWB skymap from 03:09:02 to 03:29:47 UTC (T0+3644 to T0+4889 sec). No significant new source was found in the region in the one-orbit scan observation. A typical 1-sigma averaged upper limit obtained in one scan observation is 20 mCrab at 2-20 keV. If you require information about X-ray flux by MAXI/GSC at specific coordinates, please contact the submitter of this circular by email. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26739 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Upper limits from Fermi-GBM Observations DATE: 20/01/14 06:28:29 GMT FROM: Adam Goldstein at Fermi-GBM, USRA A. Goldstein (USRA) reports on behalf of the Fermi-GBM Team and the GBM-LIGO/Virgo group: For S200114f and using the latest cWB skymap, Fermi-GBM was observing 100% of the localization probability at event time. There was no Fermi-GBM onboard trigger around the event time of the LIGO/Virgo detection of GW trigger S200114f (GCN Circ. 26734). An automated, blind search for short gamma-ray bursts below the onboard triggering threshold in Fermi-GBM also identified no counterpart candidates. The GBM targeted search, the most sensitive, coherent search for GRB-like signals, was run from +/-30 s around merger time, and also identified no counterpart candidates. We set upper limits on impulsive gamma-ray emission for the LVC localization region at merger time. Using the representative soft, normal, and hard GRB-like templates described in arXiv:1612.02395, we set the following 3 sigma flux upper limits over 10-1000 keV, weighted by GW localization probability (in units of 10^-7 erg/s/cm^2): Timescale soft norm hard -------------------------------------- 0.128 s: 5.3 8.8 16. 1.024 s: 1.7 2.6 5.8 8.192 s: 0.5 0.9 1.9 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26741 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Candidates from the Zwicky Transient Facility DATE: 20/01/14 07:26:29 GMT FROM: Igor Andreoni at Caltech Igor Andreoni (Caltech), Harsh Kumar (IITB), Michael W. Coughlin (Caltech), Tomas Ahumada (UMD), Shreya Anand (Caltech), Leo Singer (NASA/GSFC), Mansi M. Kasliwal (Caltech), Varun Bhalerao (IITB), Kishalay De (Caltech), Danny Goldstein (Caltech), Ariel Goobar (OKC), Matthew Graham (Caltech), Erik Kool (OKC), Jesper Sollerman (OKC), Dmitry Duev (Caltech), Brad Cenko (NASA GSFC) on behalf of the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and Global Relay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen (GROWTH) collaborations We observed the localization region of the unmodeled gravitational wave trigger S200114f (LVC, GCN #26734) with the Palomar 48-inch telescope equipped with the 47 square degree Zwicky Transient Facility camera (ZTF, Bellm et al. 2019, Graham et al. 2019). The tiling was optimally determined and triggered using the GROWTH Target of Opportunity marshal (Coughlin et al. 2019a, Kasliwal et al. 2019b). We started obtaining target-of-opportunity observations in the g-band and r-band beginning at 2020-01-14 03:39 UT, covering 77.7% of the integrated probability based on the cWB skymap (LVC, GCN #26734). Each exposure was 300s, reaching a g-band median depth of 21.9 mag and r-band median depth of 21.6 mag. The images were processed in real-time through the ZTF reduction and image subtraction pipelines at IPAC (Masci et al. 2019). We queried the ZTF alert stream using the Kowalski infrastructure (Duev et al., 2019). We required at least 2 detections separated by at least 15 minutes to select against moving objects. Furthermore, we cross-matched our candidates with the Minor Planet Center to flag known asteroids. We require no spatially coincident ZTF alert to be issued before the detection time of S200114f. The candidates within the 95% probability contour of S200114f that passed the automatic selection criteria and human vetting are presented in the table below. +--------------+----------+-------------+--------------+--------+------+----------+-------+-------+ | Name | IAU Name | RA | Dec | filter | mag | MJD | b_Gal | Notes | +--------------+----------+-------------+--------------+--------+------+----------+-------+-------+ | ZTF20aafdytz | AT2020vr | 07:34:06.13 | +16:46:00.51 | g | 20.9 | 58862.15 | 16.8 | (a) | | ZTF20aafdzkn | AT2020vs | 07:24:28.50 | +16:12:45.85 | g | 21.4 | 58862.15 | 14.4 | | | ZTF20aafeoka | AT2020vu | 07:16:47.14 | +10:37:18.97 | g | 21.6 | 58862.15 | 10.4 | | | ZTF20aafeadg | AT2020vw | 07:05:49.02 | +13:52:13.91 | g | 21.2 | 58862.15 | 9.4 | (b) | | ZTF20aafdyru | AT2020vg | 07:10:12.71 | +16:06:25.50 | g | 21.6 | 58862.15 | 11.3 | (c) | | ZTF20aafeaqk | AT2020vx | 07:08:43.68 | +14:38:15.44 | g | 21.2 | 58862.15 | 10.3 | (c) | | ZTF20aafemum | AT2020vt | 07:30:09.34 | +19:51:37.81 | g | 21.6 | 58862.15 | 17.1 | (d) | | ZTF20aafeewx | AT2020vy | 07:35:17.49 | +10:04:45.13 | g | 21.2 | 58862.16 | 14.2 | | | ZTF20aafegdf | AT2020vz | 07:34:32.29 | +08:47:16.85 | g | 21.0 | 58862.16 | 13.5 | (b) | | ZTF20aafedbk | AT2020wa | 07:08:38.13 | +27:51:17.40 | g | 21.2 | 58862.16 | 15.7 | (b) | | ZTF20aafeccu | AT2020wc | 07:03:22.07 | +27:22:41.21 | g | 20.7 | 58862.16 | 14.5 | (d) | +--------------+----------+-------------+--------------+--------+------+----------+-------+-------+ (a) SDSS photoz = 0.193 +- 0.0502 (b) offset from possible host galaxy (c) possible AGN based on WISE colors (d) possible host in Legacy Survey We caution that the age of these candidates is not well constrained as our triggered ToO observations are deeper than the regular survey. We encourage follow-up. ZTF and GROWTH are worldwide collaborations comprising Caltech, USA; IPAC, USA, WIS, Israel; OKC, Sweden; JSI/UMd, USA; U Washington, USA; DESY, Germany; MOST, Taiwan; UW Milwaukee, USA; LANL USA; Tokyo Tech, Japan; IITB, India; IIA, India; LJMU, UK; TTU, USA; SDSU, USA and USyd, Australia. ZTF acknowledges the generous support of the NSF under AST MSIP Grant No 1440341. GROWTH acknowledges generous support of the NSF under PIRE Grant No 1545949. Alert distribution service provided by DIRAC@UW (Patterson et al. 2019). Alert filtering and follow-up coordination is being undertaken by the GROWTH marshal system (Kasliwal et al. 2019). Alert database searches are done with using the Kowalski infrastructure (Duev et al., 2019) and with AMPEL (Nordin et al. 2019). //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26742 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f : no neutrino counterpart candidate in ANTARES search DATE: 20/01/14 07:37:09 GMT FROM: Thierry Pradier at ANTARES/IPHC/U of Strasbourg M. Ageron (CPPM/CNRS), B. Baret (APC/CNRS), A. Coleiro (APC/Universite de Paris), M. Colomer (APC/Universite de Paris), D. Dornic (CPPM/CNRS), A. Kouchner (APC/Universite de Paris), T. Pradier (IPHC/Universite de Strasbourg) report on behalf of the ANTARES Collaboration: Using on-line data from the ANTARES detector, we have performed a follow-up analysis of the recently reported LIGO/Virgo S200114f event using the 90% contour of the Initial GW_SKYMAP probability map provided by the GW interferometers (GCN26734 ). The ANTARES visibility at the time of the alert, together with the 50% and 90% contours of the probability map are shown at http://antares.in2p3.fr/GW/S200114f_Initial.png . Considering the location probability provided by the LIGO/Virgo collaborations, there is a 6.0% chance that the GW emitter was in the ANTARES **upgoing** field of view at the time of the alert. No up-going muon neutrino candidate events were recorded in the ANTARES sky during a +/-500s time-window centered on the time 2020-01-14 02:08:18 and in the 90% contour of the S200114f event. The expected number of atmospheric background events in the region visible by ANTARES is 3.33e-05 in the +/- 500s time window. An extended search during +/- 1 hour gives no up-going muon neutrino coincidence. The expected number of atmospheric background events in the region visible by ANTARES is 2.39e-04 in this larger time window. ANTARES is the largest undersea neutrino detector, installed in the Mediterranean Sea, and it is primarily sensitive to neutrinos in the TeV-PeV energy range. At 10 TeV, the median angular resolution for muon neutrinos is about 0.5 degrees. In the range 1-100 TeV ANTARES has a competitive sensitivity to this position in the sky. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26743 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: No counterpart candidates in INTEGRAL SPI-ACS and IBIS prompt observation DATE: 20/01/14 08:13:41 GMT FROM: Alexis Coleiro at APC/U. Paris Diderot Alexis Coleiro (APC, France), Carlo Ferrigno (ISDC/UniGE, Switzerland), V. Savchenko (ISDC/UniGE, Switzerland), J. Rodi (IAPS-Roma, Italy), S. Mereghetti (INAF IASF-Milano, Italy) on behalf of the INTEGRAL multi-messenger collaboration: https://www.astro.unige.ch/cdci/integral-multimessenger-collaboration Using combination of INTEGRAL all-sky detectors (following [1]): SPI/ACS, IBIS/Veto, and IBIS we have performed a search for a prompt gamma-ray counterpart of S200114f (GCN 26734). At the time of the event (2020-01-14 02:08:18 UTC, hereafter T0), INTEGRAL was operating in nominal mode. The peak of the event localization probability was at an angle of 91 deg with respect to the spacecraft pointing axis. This orientation implies strongly suppressed (2.2% of optimal) response of ISGRI, strongly suppressed (9% of optimal) response of IBIS/Veto, and somewhat suppressed (57% of optimal) response of SPI-ACS. The background within +/-300 seconds around the event was rather stable (excess variance 1.2). We have performed a search for any impulsive events in INTEGRAL SPI- ACS (as described in [2]), IBIS, and IBIS/Veto data. We do not detect any significant counterparts and estimate a 3-sigma upper limit on the 75-2000 keV fluence of 3.1e-07 erg/cm^2 (within the 50% probability containment region of the source localization) for a burst lasting less than 1 s with a characteristic short GRB spectrum (an exponentially cut off power law with alpha=-0.5 and Ep=600 keV) occurring at any time in the interval within 300 s around T0. For a typical long GRB spectrum (Band function with alpha=-1, beta=-2.5, and Ep=300 keV), the derived peak flux upper limit is ~2.5e-07 (8.8e-08) erg/cm^2/s at 1 s (8 s) time scale in 75-2000 keV energy range. We report for completeness and in order of FAP, all excesses identified in the search region. We find: T-T0 | scale | S/N | flux ( x 1e-06 erg/cm2/s) | FAP -20.5 | 0.85 | 4.3 | 4.62 +/- 0.994 +/- 1.13 | 0.0604 -32.7 | 1.25 | 3.2 | 2.83 +/- 0.817 +/- 0.696 | 0.336 57.5 | 1 | 3.3 | 3.37 +/- 0.914 +/- 0.827 | 0.579 -149 | 0.85 | 3.7 | 4.1 +/- 0.993 +/- 1.01 | 0.803 -154 | 1.6 | 3.4 | 2.66 +/- 0.722 +/- 0.652 | 0.912 Note that FAP estimates (especially at timescales above 2s) may be possibly further affected by enhanced non-stationary local background noise. This list excludes any excesses for which FAP is close to unity. All results quoted are preliminary. This circular is an official product of the INTEGRAL Multi-Messenger team. [1] Savchenko et al. 2017, A&A 603, A46 [2] Savchenko et al. 2012, A&A 541A, 122S //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26744 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: not observable by AGILE at the event time DATE: 20/01/14 09:38:42 GMT FROM: Fabrizio Lucarelli at SSDC/INAF-OAR F.Lucarelli, C. Pittori (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), M. Tavani (INAF/IAPS, and Univ. Roma Tor Vergata), C.Casentini, M.Cardillo, G. Piano, A.Ursi (INAF/IAPS), F. Verrecchia (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), A. Bulgarelli, V. Fioretti, N. Parmiggiani (INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Pilia (INAF/OA-Cagliari), F. Longo (Univ. Trieste, and INFN Trieste) report on behalf of the AGILE Team: In response to the LIGO/Virgo GW event S200114f at T0 = 2020-01-14 02:08:18.2393 (UT), a preliminary analysis of the AGILE minicalorimeter (MCAL) and GRID data found no acquisitions around T0, due to a complete Earth occultation of the S200114f 90% c.l. localization region. Additional analysis of AGILE data is in progress. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26745 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: No counterpart candidates in Fermi-LAT observations DATE: 20/01/14 11:02:00 GMT FROM: Lorenzo Scotton at CNRS/IN2P3/LUPM L. Scotton (CNRS/IN2P3/LUPM), M. Crnogorcevic (Univ. of Maryland & NASA/GSFC), M. Axelsson (KTH & Stockholm Univ.) and F. Longo (University and INFN, Trieste) report on behalf of the Fermi-LAT Collaboration: We have searched data collected by the Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) on Jan 14, 2020, for possible high-energy (E > 100 MeV) gamma-ray emission in spatial/temporal coincidence with the LIGO/Virgo trigger S200114f (GCN 26734). We define "instantaneous coverage" as the integral over the region of the LIGO probability map that is within the LAT field of view at a given time, and "cumulative coverage" as the integral of the instantaneous coverage over time. Fermi-LAT had an instantaneous coverage of ~87% of the LIGO probability at the time of the trigger (T0 = 2020-01-1402:08:18.230UTC), and reached 100% cumulative coverage after ~4.2 ks. We performed a search for a transient counterpart within the observed region of the 90% contour of LIGO map in a fixed time window from T0 to T0 + 10 ks. No significant new sources are found. We also performed a search which adapted the time interval of the analysis to the exposure of each region of the sky, and no additional excesses were found. Energy flux upper bounds for the fixed time interval between 100 MeV and 1 GeV for this search vary between 2e-10 and 2e-08 [erg/cm^2/s]. The Fermi-LAT point of contact for this event is Milena Crnogorcevic (mcrnogor@astro.umd.edu). The Fermi-LAT is a pair conversion telescope designed to cover the energy band from 20 MeV to greater than 300 GeV. It is the product of an international collaboration between NASA and DOE in the U.S. and many scientific institutions across France, Italy, Japan and Sweden. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26748 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: no counterpart candidates in the Swift/BAT observations DATE: 20/01/14 16:13:47 GMT FROM: Amy Lien at GSFC D. M. Palmer (LANL), S. D. Barthelmy (NASA/GSFC), A. Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC), T. Sakamoto (AGU), A. P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), M. G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB), A. A. Breeveld (MSSL-UCL), D. N. Burrows (PSU), S. Campana (INAF-OAB), S. B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), G. Cusumano (INAF-IASF PA), A. D'Ai (INAF-IASFPA), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), V. D'Elia (ASI-ASDC), S. Emery (UCL-MSSL), P. A. Evans (U. Leicester), P. Giommi (ASI), C. Gronwall (PSU), D. Hartmann (Clemson U.), J. A. Kennea (PSU), N. Klingler (PSU), H. A. Krimm (NSF), N. P. M. Kuin (UCL-MSSL), F. E. Marshall (NASA/GSFC), A. Melandri (INAF-OAB), J. A. Nousek (PSU), S. R. Oates (U. of Birmingham), P. T. O'Brien (U. Leicester), J. P. Osborne (U. Leicester), C. Pagani (U. Leicester), K. L. Page (U.Leicester), M. J. Page (UCL-MSSL), M. Perri (ASDC), J. L. Racusin (NASA/GSFC), B. Sbarufatti (INAF-OAB/PSU), M. H. Siegel (PSU), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), A. Tohuvavohu (U. Toronto), E. Troja (NASA/GSFC/UMCP) report on behalf of the Swift team: We report the search results in the BAT data within T0 +/- 100 s of the LVC event S200114f (LIGO/VIRGO Collaboration GCN Circ. 26734), where T0 is the LVC trigger time (2020-01-14T02:08:18.239 UTC). The center of the BAT field of view (FOV) at T0 is RA = 83.757 deg, DEC = 9.589 deg, and the roll angle is 254.150 deg. The BAT FOV (>10% partial coding) covers 97.71% of the integrated LVC localization probability. Note that the sensitivity in the BAT FOV changes with the partial coding fraction. Please see the BAT FOV figure in the summary page (link below) for the specific location of the LVC region relative to the BAT FOV. Within T0 +/- 100 s, no significant detections (signal-to-noise ratio >~ 5 sigma) are found in the BAT raw light curves with time bins of 64 ms, 1 s, and 1.6 s. Assuming an on-axis (100% coded) short GRB with a typical spectrum in the BAT energy range (i.e., a simple power-law model with a power-law index of -1.32, Lien & Sakamoto et al. 2016), the 5-sigma upper limit in the 1-s binned light curve corresponds to a flux upper limit (15-350 keV) of ~ 8.58 x 10^-8 erg/s/cm^2. Assuming a luminosity of ~ 2 x 10^47 erg/s (similar to GW170817) and an average Epeak of ~ 400 keV for short GRBs (Bhat et al. 2016), this flux upper limit corresponds to a distance of ~ 77.58 Mpc. Event data are available from T0-44.53 s to T0+45.57 s. No significant detections (above our typical image threshold of ~ 6.5 to 7 sigma) are found in the 15-350 keV images created using intervals of T0-0.1 to T0+0.1 s, T0-2 s to T0+8 s, and the whole event data range. BAT retains decreased, but significant, sensitivity to rate increases for gamma-ray events outside of its FOV. About 2.29% of the integrated LVC localization probability was outside of the BAT FOV but above the Earth's limb from Swift's location, and the corresponding flux upper limits for this region are within roughly an order of magnitude higher than those within the FOV. The results of the BAT analysis are available at https://swift.gsfc.nasa.gov/results/BATbursts/team_web/S200114f/web/source_public.html //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26749 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: upper limits from AGILE-GRID observations DATE: 20/01/14 17:06:46 GMT FROM: Fabrizio Lucarelli at SSDC/INAF-OAR F. Lucarelli, C. Pittori (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), M. Tavani (INAF/IAPS, and Univ. Roma Tor Vergata), C. Casentini, M. Cardillo, G. Piano, A.Ursi (INAF/IAPS), F. Verrecchia (SSDC, and INAF/OAR), A. Bulgarelli, V. Fioretti, N. Parmiggiani (INAF/OAS-Bologna), M. Pilia (INAF/OA-Cagliari), F. Longo (Univ. Trieste, and INFN Trieste) report on behalf of the AGILE Team: In response to the LIGO-Virgo GW event S200114f at T0 = 2020-01-14 02:08:18.239 (UT), an analysis of the AGILE exposure at T0 showed that the GW localization region (LR) was occulted by Earth (GCN #26744). We performed an analysis of the GRID data over time intervals before and after T0, when good exposures of the S200114f 90% c.l. LR were available. No candidate gamma-ray transient was detected. The following preliminary GRID values of 3-sigma upper limits (ULs) in the 50 MeV - 10 GeV energy band are obtained over different time intervals: - (T0 + 600 s ; T0 + 700 s): from 4.0e-08 to 4.1e-08 erg cm^-2 s^-1, with an exposure of about 14% of the S200114f 90% c.l. LR; - (T0 - 6 hrs; T0 + 6 hrs): from 7.3e-10 to 5.0e-09 erg cm^-2 s^-1, and - (T0 - 3 days; T0 + 6 hrs): from 7.6e-11 to 5.3e-10 erg cm^-2 s^-1, both with an exposure of about 53% of the S200114f 90% c.l. LR; These measurements were obtained with AGILE observing a large portion of the sky in spinning mode. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26750 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: SAGUARO previous detection of ZTF candidate ZTF20aafeaqk (AT2020vx) DATE: 20/01/14 22:22:50 GMT FROM: Michael J. Lundquist at University of Arizona Michael J. Lundquist, David J. Sand (UA), Kerry Paterson, Wen-fai Fong, Jillian Rastinejad (Northwestern), Jennifer Andrews (UA), Sam Wyatt (UA), Eric Christensen, Alex Gibbs, Frank Shelly, report on behalf of the SAGUARO collaboration: Following Andreoni et al. (GCN 26741), we report a previous SAGUARO (Lundquist et al. 2019) detection at the position of the candidate ZTF20aafeaqk (AT2020vx), from 2019 Nov 24. The object was detected in a stack of 4 images at the location of the transient (RA = 7:08:43.698, Dec =14:38:15.336). MJD | AB Magnitude | Error 58811.4420504 | 20.86 | 0.17 This detection was in data taken with the 1.5m Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) telescope on Mt. Lemmon, AZ during routine operations, calibrated to Gaia G. We believe ZTF20aafeaqk (AT2020vx) to be unrelated to the LIGO/Virgo event S200114f. SAGUARO is supported by the National Science Foundation under Award Nos. AST-1909358 and AST-1908972. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26751 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Constraints on a CCSN origin from KM3NeT MeV neutrino search. DATE: 20/01/14 22:22:57 GMT FROM: Alexis Coleiro at APC/U. Paris Diderot M. Colomer (APC, Universite de Paris), M. Lincetto (Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS/IN2P3, CPPM), A. Coleiro (APC, Universite de Paris), D. Dornic (Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS/IN2P3, CPPM), V. Kulikovskiy (INFN - Sezione di Genova), report on behalf of the KM3NeT Collaboration: Using online data from the KM3NeT ORCA detector, we have performed a follow-up analysis of the recently reported gravitational-wave (GW) burst candidate S200114f (GCN #26734) to investigate the possibility that this burst was emitted by a core-collapse supernova (CCSN) event. KM3NeT can detect ~10 MeV neutrinos from a Galactic CCSN through a collective rise of the photomultiplier (PMT) detection rates on top of the noise, due to the Cherenkov light produced by the interaction of electron antineutrinos through inverse beta decay. This is expected mostly during the CCSN accretion phase (lasting a few hundred ms) where most of the electron antineutrinos are supposed to be emitted [1]. Two events were observed with the CCSN trigger in the KM3NeT/ORCA online infrastructure during a 400 ms time-window starting at the time of the GW trigger while 1.4 events are expected on average from the background at trigger time (p-value = 40.1%). KM3NeT/ARCA, due to a programmed upgrade of the on-shore station in Capo Passero, is off temporarily. Using the Feldman and Cousins approach, a 90% confidence level upper limit on the number of signal events is estimated. Assuming two progenitor models from the Garching group [2] with masses of 27 Msun and 11.2 Msun, we derive a lower limit on the distance of the potential source of 11.5 kpc and 6.1 kpc respectively. Moreover, assuming a quasi-thermal neutrino spectrum as in [2] with a spectral pinching parameter value of 3 and a mean neutrino energy of 15 MeV and assuming that 70% of the energy is released in the 400 ms, we estimate the total energy emitted into neutrinos from this GW burst candidate to be E < 2.9e53 erg at 10 kpc. The KM3NeT detectors are currently under construction in the Mediterranean Sea. The KM3NeT/ORCA detector currently comprises an array of 4 detection lines and KM3NeT/ARCA detector hosts one line. Each detection line contains 18 digital optical modules hosting 31 directional PMTs. [1] M. Colomer, M. Lincetto et al. (on behalf of the KM3NeT collaboration), PoS(ICRC2019)857 [2] I. Tamborra et al., Phys. Rev. D, 90 (2014) //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26752 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: No Counterparts in DDOTI/OAN Optical Observations DATE: 20/01/14 22:38:35 GMT FROM: Simone Dichiara at UMCP/NASA/GSFC Simone Dichiara (GSFC/UMD), Eleonora Troja (GSFC/UMD), Alan M. Watson (UNAM), Nat Butler (ASU), Alexander Kutyrev (GSFC/UMD), Margarita Pereyra (UNAM), Rosa L. Becerra (UNAM), Diego Gonzalez (UNAM), William H. Lee (UNAM) and Tanner Wolfram (ASU) report: We observed LIGO/Virgo S200114f (Chatterjee et al, GCN Circ. 26734) with the DDOTI/OAN wide-field imager at the Observatorio Astronomico Nacional on Sierra San Pedro Martir (http://ddoti.astroscu.unam.mx) on the night of 2020-01-14 UTC. We tiled the LVC localization with four pointings spanning a region of approximately 13.6 degrees in RA and 20.4 degrees in DEC centered on the peak of the probability map at 07:20:09 +15:42:50 2000. This region covers about 280 square degrees and includes about 80% of the probability in the map. We observed from 2020-01-14 02:40 UTC to 2020-01-14 12:00 UTC (from 29 minutes to 9.7 hours after the event) obtaining exposures of 53 to 65 minutes across the field in the w filter. We calibrate our images against the APASS catalog. Our 10-sigma limiting magnitude are typically between w = 18.9 and w = 19.5. We detect no uncatalogued sources within the observed field with significant fading or brightening. We thank the staff of the Observatorio Astronomico Nacional in San Pedro Martir. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26753 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Candidates from SAGUARO observations DATE: 20/01/14 23:38:22 GMT FROM: Michael J. Lundquist at University of Arizona Michael J. Lundquist, David J. Sand (UA), Jillian Rastinejad, Kerry Paterson (Northwestern), Jennifer Andrews (UA), Wen-fai Fong, (Northwestern), Sam Wyatt, Eric Christensen, Alex Gibbs, Frank Shelly (UA), report on behalf of the SAGUARO collaboration: We initiated observations of 36 fields (each 5 deg^2, totalling 180 deg^2) within the LVC localization region for the GW trigger S200114f (LVC Circ 26734) starting on 2020-01-14 at 4:15 UT (2.12 hours after the GW trigger) with the 1.5m Catalina Sky Survey (CSS) telescope on Mt. Lemmon, AZ. The typical limiting magnitudes of single pointings are G~21 mag (calibrated to Gaia DR2). We have posted our pointings to the Treasure Map, and encourage others to do the same: http://treasuremap.space/alerts?graceids=S200114f We perform real-time processing and image subtraction (described in Lundquist et al. 2019, ApJL, 881, 2). After discarding known moving objects, stellar sources and known transients (cross-correlating with the Transient Name Server and the ZTF alert stream), we find no strong candidates that we believe to be associated with the GW event with S/N>5. Due to the uncertain nature of the GW event however, we report 5 additional, less likely candidates below for completeness. These are possibly variable stars or AGN. All magnitudes are based on our difference imaging and have been calibrated to Gaia G band. Name | RA | Dec | AB Mag | Mag Error | Notes SAGUARO20a 07:13:08.744 14:00:07.313 20.19 0.11 (a), (b), (c) SAGUARO20b 06:59:34.961 22:36:29.456 19.94 0.10 (a) SAGUARO20c 07:05:34.026 22:44:44.495 20.67 0.20 (a), (b) SAGUARO20d 07:20:21.244 07:35:19.555 19.85 0.10 (a) SAGUARO20e 07:04:10.181 16:27:38.455 19.29 0.07 (d) (a) Possible Variable Star (b) Coincident with faint PS1 source (c) Faded by 0.78 mag over 30 min (d) Nuclear; possible AGN SAGUARO is supported by the National Science Foundation under Award Nos. AST-1909358 and AST-1908972. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26761 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Upper limits from CALET observations. DATE: 20/01/15 06:27:32 GMT FROM: Yuta Kawakubo at Louisiana State U./CALET Y. Asaoka (Waseda U), A. Yoshida, T. Sakamoto, V. Pal'shin, S. Sugita (AGU), Y. Kawakubo (LSU), K. Yamaoka (Nagoya U), S. Nakahira (RIKEN), S. Torii (Waseda U), Y. Shimizu, T. Tamura (Kanagawa U), N. Cannady (GSFC/UMBC), M. L. Cherry (LSU), S. Ricciarini (U of Florence), P. S. Marrocchesi (U of Siena), and the CALET collaboration: At the trigger time of the compact binary merger candidate S200114f T0 = 2020-01-14 02:08:18.239 UT (The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and Virgo Collaboration, GCN Circ. 26734), the CALET Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (CGBM) high voltages were off (from T0-4 min to T0+4 min). The CALET Calorimeter (CAL) was operating in the high energy trigger mode at the trigger time of S200114f. Using the CAL data, we have searched for gamma-ray events in the 10-100 GeV band from -60 sec to +60 sec from the GW trigger time and found no candidates in the overwrap region with the LIGO-Virgo high probability localization region. The 90% upper limit of CAL is 4.7 x 10^-6 erg/cm^2/s (10-100 GeV) when the summed LIGO-Virgo probability reaches 80%. The CAL FOV was centered at RA= 111.2 deg, DEC= +50.7 deg at T0. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26764 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: AT2020vr, AT2020vt, AT2020wa and AT2020wc 10.4m GTC spectroscopy DATE: 20/01/15 09:28:38 GMT FROM: Alberto J. Castro-Tirado at IAA-CSIC A. F. Valeev (SAO-RAS), Y.-D. Hu, A. J. Castro-Tirado and E. Fernandez-Garcia (IAA-CSIC), V. Sokolov (SAO-RAS), I. Carrasco and A. Castellon (UMA), S. B. Pandey (ARIES) and N. Castro-Rodriguez (GRANTECAN, IAC, ULL), on behalf of a larger collaboration, report: Following the detection of AT2020vr/ZTF20aafdytz, AT2020vt/ZTF20aafemum,  AT2020wa/ZTF20aafedbk, and AT2020wc/ZTF20aafeccu (Andreoni et al. GCNC 26741)  within the error area of the GW event S200114f (LVC, GCNC 26734), we obtained optical spectra covering the range 3700-7400 A with the 10.4m GTC telescope equipped with OSIRIS in La Palma (Spain) starting on Jan 15, 00:01 UT. For AT2020vr/ZTF20aafdytz, we measure r= 19.80 +/- 0.02 on Jan 15, 00:08 UT. The  GTC spectrum is consistent with a SN Ia at about 6 days before maximum at redshift z = 0.213 +/- 0.001, consistent with the redshift of the host galaxy derived from the emission lines (z= 0.2132 +/- 0.0005). For AT2020vt/ZTF20aafemum, we measure r = 21.49 +/- 0.07 on Jan 15, 01:19 UT. The GTC spectrum is consistent with a SN Ia at about 7 days before maximum at redshift z = 0.255 +/- 0.009, consistent with the redshift of the host galaxy derived from the emission lines (z = 0.2528 +/- 0.0005). For AT2020wa/ZTF20aafedbk, we measure r = 19.50 +/- 0.03 on Jan 15, 02:00 UT. The GTC spectrum is consistent with a SN Ia at about 4 days before maximum at redshift z = 0.077 +/- 0.010, consistent with the redshift of the host galaxy derived from the emission lines (z = 0.0772 +/- 0.0005). For AT2020wc/ZTF20aafeccu, we measure r = 18.69 +/- 0.02 on Jan 15, 02:11 UT. The GTC spectrum is consistent with a SN Ia at about 10 days before maximum at redshift z = 0.107+/- 0.009, consistent with the redshift of the host galaxy derived from the emission lines (z = 0.0983 +/- 0.0005) Therefore we consider that AT2020vr/ZTF20aafdytz, AT2020vt/ZTF20aafemum, AT2020wa/ZTF20aafedbk and AT2020wc/ZTF20aafeccu are unrelated to the S200114f GW alert. This message can be quoted. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26768 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: No counterpart in targeted WHT/ACAM imaging DATE: 20/01/15 11:23:31 GMT FROM: Morgan Fraser at University College Dublin A. Inkenhaag (Radboud Univ.), M. Fraser (University College Dublin), P. Jonker (SRON/Radboud Univ.) R. Karjalainen (ING), A.J. Levan (Radboud Univ.), K. Maguire (Trinity College Dublin), I. Pastor Marazuela (Univ. Amsterdam) report for a larger collaboration: We obtained deep imaging of a number of nearby galaxies within the sky localisation of the unmodeled gravitational wave burst S200114f (GCN 26734). Galaxies were selected from the list provided by the HOGWARTS code (Salmon et al. arXiv:1912.07304); as no distance information is available from the GW waveform we targeted galaxies that were closer than 30 Mpc. Deep (6x100s) r-band imaging was taken with the William Herschel Telescope + ACAM on 2020 Jan 15.1 UT. Visual comparison to PanSTARRS reference images reveals no obvious transients, however as the WHT images are deeper than those from PanSTARRS we are limited to the depth of the latter. We will obtain a further epoch of deep ACAM imaging over the coming nights that will allow us to perform difference imaging against these observations. We thank the Isaac Newton Group staff and director for facilitating these observations. The list of targeted galaxies follows UGC03755    07:13:51.600 +10:31:14.16 NGC2350     07:13:12.192 +12:15:57.60 UGC03658    07:04:40.080 +17:34:57.36 UGC03587    06:53:54.960 +19:17:58.56 UGC03876    07:29:17.520 +27:53:52.80 UGC03602    06:55:26.880 +15:56:03.84 PGC020981   07:25:38.880 +09:10:59.70 UGC03974    07:41:55.200 +16:48:11.16 PGC2807004  07:30:59.280 +08:00:01.80 PGC020554   07:16:36.120 +29:36:38.16 UGC03516    06:43:08.400 +22:52:27.12 PGC021614   07:42:31.920 +16:33:41.40 UGC03672    07:06:27.600 +30:19:19.20 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26787 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Swift-XRT sources and observations DATE: 20/01/16 14:39:16 GMT FROM: Phil Evans at U of Leicester P.A. Evans (U. Leicester), J.A. Kennea (PSU), A. Tohuvavohu (U. Toronto), S.D. Barthelmy (NASA/GSFC), A.P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), M.G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB), A.A. Breeveld (UCL-MSSL), P. Brown (TAMU), D.N. Burrows (PSU), S. Campana (INAF-OAB), S.B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), G. Cusumano (INAF-IASF PA), A. D'Ai (INAF-IASFPA), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), V. D'Elia(ASDC), S.W.K. Emery (UCL-MSSL), P. Giommi (ASI), C. Gronwall (PSU), D. Hartmann (U. Clemson), H.A. Krimm (CRESST/GSFC/USRA), N.J. Klingler (PSU), N.P.M. Kuin (UCL-MSSL), A.Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC), F.E. Marshall (NASA/GSFC), A. Melandri (INAF-OAB), J.A. Nousek (PSU), S.R. Oates (U. Birmingham), P.T. O'Brien (U. Leicester), J.P. Osborne (U. Leicester), C. Pagani (U. Leicester), K.L. Page (U.Leicester), M.J.Page (UCL-MSSL), D.M. Palmer (LANL), M. Perri (ASDC), J.L. Racusin (NASA/GSFC), B. Sbarufatti (INAF-OAB/PSU), M.H. Siegel (PSU), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), E. Troja (NASA/GSFC/UMCP) report on behalf of the Swift team: Swift has carried out 206 observations of the LVC error region for the GW trigger S200114f following the 'cWB' (version 3) GW localisation map. The observations currently span from 6.6 ks to 99 ks after the LVC trigger, and the XRT has covered 22.3 deg^2 on the sky (corrected for overlaps). This covers 30% of the probability in the 'cWB' (version 3) skymap. These pointings and associated metadata have been reported to the Treasure Map (Wyatt et al., arXiv 2001.00588; http://treasuremap.space/alerts?graceids=S200114f). A 'rank 2' source has been found, so classified because it shows indications of fading, however it is spatially consistent with a source in the WISE AGN candidates catalogs (Assef et al., 2018) and therefore may simply be a variable AGN. The details of this source are: Source 2: ============= RA: 110.3641 ( = 07h 21m 27.38s) J2000 Dec: +17.0360 ( = +17d 02' 09.6") J2000 Error: 7.0 (arcsec, radius, 90% confidence). Peak Rate: 9.6e-02 +/- 1.7e-02 ct/sec (0.3-10 keV) Peak Flux: 4.1e-12 +/- 7.5e-13 erg cm^-2 s^-1 (0.3-10 keV) Catalogued: No RASS UL: 3.5e-02 ct/sec, 3-sigma, converted to XRT (0.3-10 keV) Further observations of this source are scheduled. In total, we have detected 8 X-ray sources. Each source is assigned a rank of 1-4 which describes how likely it is to be related to the GW trigger, with 1 being the most likely and 4 being the least likely. The ranks are described at https://www.swift.ac.uk/ranks.php. We have found: * 0 sources of rank 1 * 1 source of rank 2 * 6 sources of rank 3 * 1 source of rank 4 RANK 3 sources ============== These are uncatalogued X-ray sources, however they are not brighter than previous upper limits, so do not stand out as likely counterparts to the GW trigger. | Source ID | RA | Dec | Err90 | | S200114f_X1 | 07h 13m 48.09s | +23d 04' 50.5" | 7.5" | | S200114f_X10 | 03h 41m 58.28s | -25d 24' 17.6" | 6.1" | | S200114f_X46 | 03h 41m 1.50s | -25d 26' 54.4" | 6.4" | | S200114f_X56 | 07h 22m 51.63s | +16d 15' 51.0" | 6.3" | | S200114f_X57 | 07h 23m 54.09s | +16d 22' 00.1" | 7.7" | | S200114f_X58 | 07h 23m 50.42s | +16d 21' 17.1" | 6.7" | RANK 4 sources ============== These are catalogued X-ray sources, showing no signs of outburst compared to previous observations, so they are not likely to be related to the GW trigger. | Source ID | RA | Dec | Err90 | | S200114f_X59 | 07h 15m 9.23s | +15d 55' 36.9" | 8.3" | The Swift-XRT observations also covered the locations of 6 sources reported by other observers, thus: * AT2020vr (GCN26741) F < 3.3x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1. * AT2020vs (GCN26741) F < 2.0x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1. * AT2020vt (GCN26741) F < 4.2x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1. * AT2020vu (GCN26741) F < 8.6x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1. * AT2020vw (GCN26741) F < 4.7x10^-12 erg cm^-2 s^-1. * AT2020wc (GCN26741) F < 1.7x10^-11 erg cm^-2 s^-1. Flux limits are 3-sigma upper limits on the 0.3-10 keV observed flux. For all flux conversions and comparisons with catalogues and upper limits from other missions, we assumed a power-law spectrum with NH=3x10^20 cm^-2, and photon index (Gamma)=1.7 The results of the XRT automated analysis, including details of the sources listed above, are online at https://www.swift.ac.uk/LVC/S200114f This circular is an official product of the Swift XRT team. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26791 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Possible X-ray transient DATE: 20/01/16 19:14:59 GMT FROM: Phil Evans at U of Leicester P.A. Evans (U. Leicester), J.A. Kennea (PSU), A. Tohuvavohu (U. Toronto), S.D. Barthelmy (NASA/GSFC), A.P. Beardmore (U. Leicester), M.G. Bernardini (INAF-OAB), A.A. Breeveld (UCL-MSSL), P. Brown (TAMU), D.N. Burrows (PSU), S. Campana (INAF-OAB), S.B. Cenko (NASA/GSFC), G. Cusumano (INAF-IASF PA), A. D'Ai (INAF-IASFPA), P. D'Avanzo (INAF-OAB), V. D'Elia(ASDC), S.W.K. Emery (UCL-MSSL), P. Giommi (ASI), C. Gronwall (PSU), D. Hartmann (U. Clemson), H.A. Krimm (CRESST/GSFC/USRA), N.J. Klingler (PSU), N.P.M. Kuin (UCL-MSSL), A.Y. Lien (GSFC/UMBC), F.E. Marshall (NASA/GSFC), A. Melandri (INAF-OAB), J.A. Nousek (PSU), S.R. Oates (U. Birmingham), P.T. O'Brien (U. Leicester), J.P. Osborne (U. Leicester), C. Pagani (U. Leicester), K.L. Page (U.Leicester), M.J.Page (UCL-MSSL), D.M. Palmer (LANL), M. Perri (ASDC), J.L. Racusin (NASA/GSFC), B. Sbarufatti (INAF-OAB/PSU), M.H. Siegel (PSU), G. Tagliaferri (INAF-OAB), E. Troja (NASA/GSFC/UMCP) report on behalf of the Swift team: We have carried out further observations of the rank 2 source (referred to as Source 2) in GCN 26787. This source,hereafter, Source S200114f_X2 has not faded between our observations, however it is detected with a 0.3-10 keV count rate of 0.069 +/- 0.0064 ct/sec. A spectrum created from the recent XRT data can be modelled with a power-law with photon index 1.4 (+0.4, -0.3). Using this model, a 3-sigma RASS upper limit at this location translates to 0.038 ct/sec in XRT. The recent detectionis therefore nearly 5-sigma above the upper limit from RASS, accounting for the spectral shape. As reported in GCN 26787, this source is positionally coincident with a candidate AGN, and therefore this rise in flux may indicate nothing more than AGN activity, however it could also indicate a transient source occuring in the AGN. Our position uncertainty does not allow us to confirm whether this source is in the nuclear of the WISE galaxy. Further observations are therefore strongly encouraged. The source position is RA: 110.3641 ( = 07h 21m 27.38s) J2000 Dec: +17.0360 ( = +17d 02' 09.6") J2000 Error: 7.0 arcsec, (radius, 90% confidence). //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26793 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Upper Limits from Wide-Field Infrared Search with Palomar Gattini-IR DATE: 20/01/17 00:06:21 GMT FROM: Matthew Hankins at Caltech K. De (Caltech), M. Hankins (Caltech), M. Coughlin (Caltech), M. M. Kasliwal (Caltech), S. M. Adams (Caltech), I. Andreoni (Caltech), S. Anand (Caltech), M. Sharma (Caltech), L. Singer (NASA GSFC), T. Ahumada (UMD), A. Moore (ANU), J. Soon (ANU), M. Ashley (UNSW), T. Travouillon (ANU), R. Soria (NAOC) report on behalf of the Palomar Gattini-IR team and the larger GROWTH (Global Relay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen) collaboration We report wide-field near-infrared follow-up observations of the localization region of the gravitational wave event S200114f (GCN 26734) by the Palomar Gattini-IR survey (Moore and Kasliwal 2019). Gattini-IR is a newly commissioned near-IR camera with a field of view of 25 square degrees mounted on a robotic 30 cm telescope at Palomar observatory (De et al. 2020). We started customized Target of Opportunity observations at UT 2020-01-14 05:02. The tiling was optimally determined and triggered using the GROWTH Target of Opportunity marshal (Coughlin et al. 2019a, Kasliwal et al. 2019b). We imaged a total of 479 square degrees, covering 89.1% of the probability region of the event until UT 11:21. We obtained a second epoch of observations starting the next night at at UT 2019-01-15 02:03 and continuing until UT 07:59. All data were processed and stacked with the Palomar Gattini-IR data reduction pipeline. The typical limiting magnitude of each field visit (300s second exposure time) was between 15.9 and 16.3 AB mag in J-band. No viable counterparts with at least two detections and without previous history of variability were identified in the single epoch stacks within the survey region. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26796 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: ZTF Forced Photometry of the Swift Source S200114f_X2 DATE: 20/01/17 06:19:19 GMT FROM: Igor Andreoni at Caltech Igor Andreoni (Caltech), Mansi M. Kasliwal (Caltech), Matthew Graham (Caltech), Frank Masci (IPAC) On behalf of the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and Global Relay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen (GROWTH) collaborations The Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF; Graham et al. 2019, Bellm et al. 2019) has repeatidly observed the location of Source S200114f_X2 (Evans et al., GCN #26787, GCN #26791), an X-ray transient candidate possibly associated with the gravitational wave event S200114f (LVC, GCN #26734). We used the Kowalski infrastructure (Duev et al., 2019) to query the ZTF database. Only one source, ZTF19aaehfwn, was found in ZTF data that generated >5sigma alerts within a 21-arcsec radius from Source S200114f_X2, whose position was reported with 7 arcsec uncertainty (Evans et al., GCN #26787, GCN #26791). ZTF19aaehfwn is spatially coincident with the candidate quasar WISEA J072127.41+170205.7 (Assef et al., 2018), that is consistent with the location of Source S200114f_X2 as previously noted by Evans et al. (GCN #26787, GCN #26791). ZTF19aaehfwn/WISEA J072127.41+170205.7 is located 3.9 arcsec away from Source S200114f_X2. We performed forced photometry on 57 ZTF images acquired between 2018-11-17 and 2020-01-14 08:23:13, with the last image taken about 6 hours after the S200114f detection time. Forced photometry was performed on images processed through the ZTF reduction and image subtraction pipelines at IPAC (Masci et al. 2019). The light curve of ZTF19aaehfwn shows possible long and short timescale variability, with upper limits at about r>20 before September 2019, followed by several detections at roughly 19.5 < r < 20.5 and 19.6 < g < 20.1. The light curve behavior does not appear atypical for an AGN and there is no evidence of strong flares. A decline in brightness is measured in the first hours after S200114f, as shown in the table below presenting the latest data points available. +---------------------+--------+----------+------+ | Date (UTC) | filter | mag (AB) | err | +---------------------+--------+----------+------+ | 2020-01-12 07:51:20 | r | 19.52 | 0.19 | | 2020-01-14 08:22:34 | r | 19.70 | 0.11 | | 2020-01-14 08:23:13 | r | 20.28 | 0.18 | +---------------------+--------+----------+------+ The ZTF forced-photometry service was funded under the Heising-Simons Foundation grant #12540303 (PI: Graham). ZTF and GROWTH are worldwide collaborations comprising Caltech, USA; IPAC, USA, WIS, Israel; OKC, Sweden; JSI/UMd, USA; U Washington, USA; DESY, Germany; MOST, Taiwan; UW Milwaukee, USA; LANL USA; Tokyo Tech, Japan; IITB, India; IIA, India; LJMU, UK; TTU, USA; SDSU, USA and USyd, Australia. ZTF acknowledges the generous support of the NSF under AST MSIP Grant No 1440341. GROWTH acknowledges generous support of the NSF under PIRE Grant No 1545949. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26803 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: No transients found in J-GEM observations of nearby galaxies DATE: 20/01/17 15:59:45 GMT FROM: Hiroki Onozato at University of Hyogo R. Tanaka; K. Daikuhara; Y. Sekiguchi (Toho U.); K. Yanagisawa (NAOJ); T. Nakaoka; K. Takagi; M. Sasada; K. S. Kawabata (Hiroshima U.); H. Onozato, J. Takahashi (Hyogo U.); K. Ohta (Kyoto U.); F. Abe (Nagoya U.); M. Tanaka (Tohoku U.) on behalf of J-GEM collaboration We report imaging observations for the gravitational wave event S200114f (LVC, GCN Circ. 26734). We started our observations from 2020-01-14 17:55 UT (MJD=58862.75) about 16 hour after the event and ended at 2020-01-16 11:56 UT (MJD=58864.50). We performed galaxy-targeted observations for 56 galaxies (see the table below) selected from the Catalog and Atlas of the LV galaxies (LVG) (Karachentsev et al., 2004) and the GLADE catalog (Dalya et al. 2018) in the probability skymap of S200114f using the following telescopes and instruments. We found no apparent transient objects in these galaxies to 5 sigma limiting magnitudes in the AB system listed below. galid ra dec dist J H Ks R obsid -------------- -------- -------- ---- ---- ---- ---- ---- ------------------- UGCA193 150.6508 -6.0119 9.7 -- 18.2 -- 19.3 Kanata-HONIR SexA 152.7533 -4.6928 1.45 -- 18.7 -- 19.2 Kanata-HONIR MCG_-01-26-009 150.39 -6.525 9.7 -- 18.3 -- 18.8 Kanata-HONIR GALFA-Dw4 86.4367 10.7711 7.22 18.5 18.0 17.5 -- Nayuta-NIC,OAOWFC KKSG15 148.7937 -6.27 9.7 -- 17.4 -- 18.2 Kanata-HONIR NGC3115 151.3083 -7.7186 9.68 -- 16.7 -- 17.5 Kanata-HONIR KKSG18 151.4233 -7.9814 9.7 -- -- -- 18.7 Kanata-HONIR UGC03303 81.2479 4.505 7.14 -- 15.2 -- -- Kanata-HONIR KKSG17 150.41 -8.2489 9.7 -- 18.2 -- 18.7 Kanata-HONIR KK49 85.4229 6.6817 5.15 18.2 18.1 17.8 -- OAOWFC,Nayuta-NIC ESO483-013 63.1712 -23.1589 7.4 18.5 -- -- -- OAOWFC Orion 86.2583 5.0683 6.46 17.4 17.8 17.2 -- OAOWFC,Nayuta-NIC A0554+07 89.4029 7.4919 5.5 18.1 18.4 18.0 -- Nayuta-NIC IC0559 146.1829 9.6153 9.4 18.0 18.5 -- -- OAOWFC,Kanata-HONIR DDO047 115.4792 16.8006 8.17 -- 18.4 -- 19.4 Kanata-HONIR KK65 115.63 16.5611 7.98 -- 18.1 -- 19.7 Kanata-HONIR SexDSph 153.2625 -1.6144 0.09 -- 18.6 -- 19.5 Kanata-HONIR AGC174585 114.0429 9.9864 7.73 -- 18.3 -- 19.5 Kanata-HONIR UGC03755 108.4658 10.5219 7.69 17.8 18.5 -- 19.6 OAOWFC,Kanata-HONIR galid ra dec dist R J H obsid --------------- -------- ------- -------- ---- ---- ---- ------------ GL071852+154033 109.7152 15.676 149.7351 19.4 -- 18.1 Kanata-HONIR GL071845+145748 109.6861 14.9632 130.0695 19.6 -- 18.3 Kanata-HONIR GL072133+151443 110.3871 15.2453 121.4037 19.8 -- 18.3 Kanata-HONIR GL071720+170810 109.3354 17.136 117.0489 20.6 -- 19.1 Kanata-HONIR GL071709+170909 109.2889 17.1524 103.1961 20.6 -- 19.1 Kanata-HONIR GL071904+173407 109.7671 17.5685 195.1108 20.7 -- 19.3 Kanata-HONIR GL071623+163821 109.0957 16.639 59.5044 19.9 -- 18.7 Kanata-HONIR GL071847+174335 109.6968 17.7263 176.0128 20.1 -- 18.8 Kanata-HONIR GL072201+145837 110.5043 14.9769 187.75 20.2 -- 19.0 Kanata-HONIR GL071622+170440 109.0936 17.0776 184.4045 17.9 -- 17.4 Kanata-HONIR GL072235+152917 110.6464 15.488 159.6764 19.8 -- 18.6 Kanata-HONIR GL072235+161218 110.6446 16.2049 116.4286 20.1 -- 19.3 Kanata-HONIR GL072220+171713 110.5836 17.2869 36.6017 19.2 -- 17.8 Kanata-HONIR GL071536+150837 108.898 15.1436 66.3962 -- 18.0 -- OAOWFC GL071535+150837 108.8977 15.1436 69.2797 -- 18.0 -- OAOWFC GL071543+145815 108.9296 14.9708 131.15 -- 18.0 -- OAOWFC GL071851+133129 109.712 13.5247 65.5892 18.7 -- 17.5 Kanata-HONIR GL071452+142253 108.7168 14.3813 124.0912 19.7 -- 18.5 Kanata-HONIR GL071240+180941 108.1675 18.1615 186.3849 -- 18.2 -- OAOWFC GL071936+124014 109.9003 12.6707 119.1697 21.1 -- 19.7 Kanata-HONIR GL071311+185631 108.2938 18.9419 145.9523 -- 17.8 -- OAOWFC GL071204+180027 108.0146 18.0076 131.0155 -- 18.2 -- OAOWFC GL071310+185946 108.2929 18.9961 72.2583 -- 17.8 -- OAOWFC GL071248+184749 108.1999 18.7969 192.7041 -- 17.8 -- OAOWFC GL071145+180852 107.9363 18.1479 155.8316 -- 18.2 -- OAOWFC GL071150+181518 107.9597 18.2551 73.6389 -- 18.2 -- OAOWFC GL071141+180841 107.9205 18.1448 185.7368 -- 18.2 -- OAOWFC GL071214+184901 108.0576 18.8171 132.0515 -- 17.8 -- OAOWFC GL071242+142548 108.1734 14.4301 122.0519 20.3 -- 19.0 Kanata-HONIR GL072527+130403 111.3637 13.0676 147.6425 15.7 -- 14.5 Kanata-HONIR GL071150+190004 107.9573 19.0012 183.6792 -- 17.8 -- OAOWFC GL071311+134507 108.2944 13.7519 169.5679 20.3 -- 19.1 Kanata-HONIR GL071553+120654 108.969 12.1149 30.1852 -- -- 19.0 Kanata-HONIR GL072540+120523 111.4156 12.0898 132.9442 16.9 -- 15.9 Kanata-HONIR GL071105+144312 107.7713 14.7201 150.29 20.7 -- 19.3 Kanata-HONIR GL072557+120332 111.4872 12.0589 132.9218 16.9 -- -- Kanata-HONIR GL071726+124102 109.3597 12.6838 178.0517 20.4 -- 19.3 Kanata-HONIR Kanata-HONIR: 150 cm Kanata telescope at Higashi-Hiroshima Observatory and HONIR -- a 2 channel imager (Rc and H or J) (Akitaya et al. 2014, Proc. SPIE 9147, 91474O) Nayuta-NIC: 200 cm Nayuta telescope at Nishi-Harima Astronomical Observatory and Nishiharima Infrared Camera, NIC (J, H, Ks) OAOWFC: 91 cm Okayama Astrophysical Observatory NIR Wide Field Camera, OAOWFC (J) (Yanagisawa et al., 2019, PASJ, 71, 118) //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26806 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: More candidates from the Zwicky Transient Facility DATE: 20/01/17 18:25:53 GMT FROM: Igor Andreoni at Caltech Igor Andreoni (Caltech), Tomas Ahumada (UMD), Simeon Reusch (DESY), Harsh Kumar (IITB), Michael W. Coughlin (Caltech), Leo Singer (NASA GSFC), Mansi M. Kasliwal (Caltech), Viraj Karambelkar (Caltech), Gaurav Waratkar (IITB), Shreya Anand (Caltech), Matthew Graham (Caltech), Jesper Sollerman (OKC) on behalf of the Zwicky Transient Facility (ZTF) and Global Relay of Observatories Watching Transients Happen (GROWTH) collaborations We continued observing the localization region of the unmodeled gravitational wave trigger S200114f (LVC, GCN #26734) on 2020-01-15 starting at 08:04:13 UTC with the Palomar 48-inch telescope equipped with the 47 square degree Zwicky Transient Facility camera (ZTF, Bellm et al. 2019, Graham et al. 2019). The tiling was optimally determined and triggered using the GROWTH Target of Opportunity marshal (Coughlin et al. 2019a, Kasliwal et al. 2019b). The images were processed in real-time through the ZTF reduction and image subtraction pipelines at IPAC (Masci et al. 2019). We queried the ZTF alert stream using Kowalski (Duev et al., 2019) and AMPEL (Nordin et al., 2019), requiring at least 2 detections separated by at least 15 minutes to select against moving objects. Furthermore, we cross-matched our candidates with the Minor Planet Center to flag known asteroids. We require no spatially coincident ZTF alert to be issued before the detection time of S200114f. New candidates were found within the 96% probability contour of S200114f, in addition to those reported in GCN #26741. The new transient candidates are presented in the table below. +--------------+-----------+-------------+--------------+--------+------+----------+-------+--------+ | Name | IAU Name | RA | Dec | filter | mag | MJD | b_Gal | Notes | +--------------+-----------+-------------+--------------+--------+------+----------+-------+--------+ | ZTF20aafefpy | AT2020acf | 07:33:43.01 | +09:31:14.29 | g | 21.2 | 58863.38 | 13.7 | (a)(c) | | ZTF20aafrviq | AT2020ace | 07:05:04.36 | +25:07:09.97 | g | 20.5 | 58863.38 | 14.0 | (a) | | ZTF20aafeglp | AT2020acn | 07:01:37.68 | +21:02:59.38 | g | 19.9 | 58863.38 | 11.6 | (b) | | ZTF20aafedfu | AT2020ack | 07:08:37.86 | +23:30:00.66 | g | 21.4 | 58863.37 | 14.1 | (c) | | ZTF20aafeaxv | AT2020ach | 07:12:02.81 | +15:11:55.51 | r | 20.3 | 58862.18 | 11.3 | (d) | | ZTF20aafemdh | AT2020acg | 07:17:40.10 | +17:55:10.62 | g | 21.5 | 58863.37 | 13.7 | (e) | | ZTF20aafemxx | AT2020acj | 07:18:56.78 | +16:54:18.65 | r | 21.6 | 58862.17 | 13.6 | (e) | | ZTF20aafeszi | AT2020acm | 07:21:12.76 | +27:10:34.94 | r | 20.4 | 58862.18 | 18.1 | (e)(c) | | ZTF20aafmdlx | AT2020zf | 03:46:00.66 | -26:50:41.00 | g | 19.5 | 58863.12 | -51.3 | (e)(f) | | ZTF20aafshty | AT2020ada | 07:07:39.73 | +19:10:51.54 | g | 21.9 | 58862.15 | 12.1 | (c) | | ZTF20aafeiec | AT2020acp | 07:02:31.43 | +16:10:53.08 | g | 21.1 | 58862.16 | 9.7 | (g) | | ZTF20aafeogg | AT2020aci | 07:15:47.17 | +14:16:17.56 | r | 21.2 | 58862.18 | 11.8 | (g) | | ZTF20aafsfki | AT2020aco | 07:09:11.26 | +09:21:16.02 | g | 21.3 | 58863.38 | 8.2 | (g)(c) | | ZTF20aafsero | AT2020acl | 07:15:09.53 | +13:26:43.86 | r | 21.4 | 58862.18 | 11.3 | (g) | | ZTF20aafecav | AT2020acx | 07:06:03.61 | +23:09:39.54 | g | 21.3 | 58863.37 | 13.3 | (e)(h) | | ZTF20aafeolw | AT2020acy | 07:13:24.59 | +11:23:30.79 | r | 21.4 | 58862.18 | 9.9 | (g) | | ZTF20aafryfe | AT2020acz | 07:38:29.43 | +12:55:02.75 | g | 21.3 | 58863.38 | 16.1 | (c) | | ZTF20aafesaq | AT2020xb | 06:55:56.55 | +26:34:29.20 | r | 21.3 | 58863.39 | 12.6 | (e)(h) | +--------------+-----------+-------------+--------------+--------+------+----------+-------+--------+ (a) offset from possible host (b) close to a bright star, but not coincident (c) AGN? (d) Possible flaring activity (e) on top of an apparently small galaxy (f) first reported by ALeRCE (g) coincident with a faint point source (h) stellar? We note that ZTF detections from 2018 and 2019 are present at the location of the SAGUAROc candidate (Lundquist et al., GCN #26753), which further suggests that it could be a stellar variable source. ZTF and GROWTH are worldwide collaborations comprising Caltech, USA; IPAC, USA, WIS, Israel; OKC, Sweden; JSI/UMd, USA; U Washington, USA; DESY, Germany; MOST, Taiwan; UW Milwaukee, USA; LANL USA; Tokyo Tech, Japan; IITB, India; IIA, India; LJMU, UK; TTU, USA; SDSU, USA and USyd, Australia. ZTF acknowledges the generous support of the NSF under AST MSIP Grant No 1440341. GROWTH acknowledges generous support of the NSF under PIRE Grant No 1545949. Alert distribution service provided by DIRAC@UW (Patterson et al. 2019). Alert filtering and follow-up coordination is being undertaken by the GROWTH marshal system (Kasliwal et al. 2019). Alert database searches are done with using the Kowalski infrastructure (Duev et al., 2019) and with AMPEL (Nordin et al. 2019). //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26830 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: SOAR spectroscopy of AT2020zf, AT2020ace and AT2020ach DATE: 20/01/20 23:14:54 GMT FROM: Felipe Olivares E. at Millennium Institute of Astrophysics Regis Cartier (CTIO/OIR lab), Felipe Olivares (INCT/UDA), Ósmar Rodríguez (UNAB), Nicolás Meza-Retamal (ESO Chile), Jonathan Quirola (PUC), Juanita Antilen (U de Chile), Sahar Allam (Fermilab), Melissa Butner (ETSU), Douglas Tucker (Fermilab), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis U), Martin Makler (CBPF), Clecio R. Bom (CBPF), Luidhy Santana-Silva (Valongo Observatory), Clara Martinez-Vazquez (CTIO/OIR lab), Alyssa Garcia (Brandeis U), Ken Herner (Fermilab), James Annis (Fermilab), Antonella Palmese (Fermilab), Nora Sherman (Fermilab and Brandeis U), Robert Morgan (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Tristan Bachmann (U Chicago), and Tamara Davis (U Queensland), on behalf of the DESGW team*: We report SOAR Goodman spectroscopy of AT2020zf, AT2020ace and AT2020ach, possible counterparts to the unmodeled GW event S200114f reported by the LVC in GCN Circular No. 26734. The candidates were found by ZTF (GCN Circular No. 26806). We obtained 1500, 2x1500 and 2x1500 sec exposures of AT2020zf, AT2020ace and AT2020ach, respectively, using the Goodman HTS instrument on the 4.1m SOAR telescope at Cerro Pachón. The SNID classifier analysis of these spectra allow us to conclude that: AT2020zf (ZTF20aafmdlx) is consistent with a Type Ia SN at a redshift of 0.136 (from host galaxy emission lines) around maximum. AT2020ace (ZTF20aafrviq) is similar to Type II (pec) SNe at a redshift of 0.096 (from host galaxy emission lines). The low signal-to-noise spectrum shows H-beta at ~5000 km/s on top of a blue continuum, however, H alpha appears only in emission. Further observations are encouraged. AT2020ach (ZTF20aafeaxv) is consistent with a Type Ic-BL at a redshift of 0.155 (from the SNID analysis) a few days before peak. The SOAR followup program is a partnership between the US (PIs: Kilpatrick & Tucker), Chilean (PI: Olivares), and Brazilian (PI: Makler) community. Based on observations obtained at the Southern Astrophysical Research (SOAR) telescope, which is a joint project of the Ministerio da Ciencia, Tecnologia, Inovacoes e Comunicacoes do Brasil (MCTIC/LNA), the U.S. National Science Foundation's National Optical Astronomy Observatory (NOAO), the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), and Michigan State University (MSU). *The DESGW Collaboration: Sahar Allam (Fermilab), James Annis (Fermilab), Iair Arcavi (Tel Aviv U), Tristan Bachmann (U Chicago), Paulo Barchi (INPE & Brandeis U), Thomas Beatty (U of Arizona) Keith Bechtol (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Federico Berlfein (Brandeis U), Antonio Bernardo (U of Sao Paulo), Dillon Brout (U Penn), Robert Butler (Indiana U), Melissa Butner (ETSU), Annalisa Calamida (STScI), Hsin-Yu Chen (Harvard U), Chris Conselice (U of Nottingham), Carlos Contreras (STScI), Jeff Cooke (Swinburne U), Chris D’Andrea (U Penn), Tamara Davis (U Queensland), Reinaldo de Carvalho (UNICSUL), H. Thomas Diehl (Fermilab), Zoheyr Doctor (U Chicago), Alex Drlica-Wagner (Fermilab), Maria Drout (U Toronto), Maya Fishbach (U Chicago), Francisco Forster (U de Chile), Ryan Foley (UCSC), Joshua Frieman (Fermilab & U Chicago), Chris Frohmaier (U of Portsmouth), Ori Fox (STScI), Alyssa Garcia (Brandeis U), Juan Garcia-Bellido (U Autónoma de Madrid), Mandeep Gill (SLAC & Stanford U), Robert Gruendl (NCSA), Will Hartley (U College London), Kenneth Herner (Fermilab), Daniel Holz (U Chicago), Jorge Horvath (U of Sao Paulo), D. Andrew Howell (Las Cumbres Observatory), Richard Kessler (U Chicago), Charles Kilpatrick (UCSC), Nikolay Kuropatkin (Fermilab), Ofer Lahav (U College London), Huan Lin (Fermilab), Andrew Lundgren (U of Portsmouth), Martin Makler (CBPF), Clara Martinez-Vazquez (CTIO/OIR lab), Curtis McCully (Las Cumbres Observatory), Mitch McNanna (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Robert Morgan (U of Wisconsin-Madison), Gautham Narayan (STScI), Eric Neilsen (Fermilab), Robert Nichol (U of Portsmouth), Antonella Palmese (Fermilab), Francisco Paz-Chinchon (NCSA & UIUC), Matthew Penny (OSU), Maria Pereira (Brandeis U), Sandro Rembold (UFSM), Armin Rest (STScI & JHU), Livia Rocha (U Sao Paulo), Russell Ryan (STScI), Masao Sako (U Penn), Samir Salim (Indiana U), David Sand (U of Arizona), Luidhy Santana-Silva (Valongo Observatory), Daniel Scolnic (Duke U), Nora Sherman (Fermilab), J. Allyn Smith (Austin Peay State U), Mathew Smith (U of Southampton), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis U), Lou Strolger (STScI), Riccardo Sturani (UFRN), Mark Sullivan (U of Southampton), Masaomi Tanaka (NAOJ), Nozomu Tominaga (Konan U), Douglas Tucker (Fermilab), Yousuke Utsumi (Stanford U), Stefano Valenti (UC Davis), Kathy Vivas (CTIO/OIR lab), Alistair Walker (CTIO/OIR lab), Sara Webb (Swinburne U), Matt Wiesner (Benedictine U), Brian Yanny (Fermilab), Michitoshi Yoshida (NAOJ), Alfredo Zenteno (CTIO/OIR lab). //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26848 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Upper limits from Konus-Wind observations DATE: 20/01/22 07:26:05 GMT FROM: Anna Ridnaia at Ioffe Institute A. Ridnaia, S. Golenetskii, R.Aptekar, D. Frederiks, M. Ulanov, D. Svinkin, A. Tsvetkova, A. Lysenko, and T. Cline, on behalf of the Konus-Wind team, report: Konus-Wind (KW) was observing the whole sky at the time of the LIGO/Virgo event S200114f (2020-01-14 02:08:18.239 UTC, hereafter T0; LIGO/Virgo Collaboration GCN Circ. 26734). No triggered KW GRBs happened ~1.5 days before and ~1.5 hours after T0. Using waiting-mode data within the interval T0 +/- 100 s, we found no significant (> 5 sigma) excess over the background in both KW detectors on temporal scales from 2.944 s to 100 s. We estimate an upper limit (90% conf.) on the 20 - 1500 keV fluence to 7.9x10^-7 erg/cm^2 for a burst lasting less than 2.944 s and having a typical KW short GRB spectrum (an exponentially cut off power law with alpha =-0.5 and Ep=500 keV). For a typical long GRB spectrum (the Band function with alpha=-1, beta=-2.5, and Ep=300 keV), the corresponding limiting peak flux is 2.2x10^-7 erg/cm^2/s (20 - 1500 keV, 2.944 s scale). All the quoted values are preliminary. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26866 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: AstroSat CZTI upper limits DATE: 20/01/24 05:06:05 GMT FROM: Varun Bhalerao at Indian Inst of Tech V. Shenoy (IITB), Aarthy E. (PRL), V. Bhalerao (IITB), D. Bhattacharya (IUCAA), A. R. Rao (TIFR), S. Vadawale (PRL) report on behalf of the AstroSat CZTI collaboration: We have carried a search for X-ray candidates in Astrosat CZTI data in a 100 sec window around the trigger time of the Burst event S200114f (UTC 2020-01-14 02:08:18, GraceDB event). We use the cWB.fits.gz,3 map (LVC GCN 26734; https://gracedb.ligo.org/api/superevents/S200114f/files/cWB.fits.gz,3) for our analysis. CZTI is a coded aperture mask instrument that has considerable effective area for about 29% of the entire sky, but is also sensitive to brighter transients from the entire sky. At the time of burst, Astrosat's nominal pointing is RA,DEC = 12:36:35.7, 62:15:38.8 (189.1488,62.2608), which is ~71 deg away from the maximum probability location, which severely reduces the effective area of CZTI. At the time of burst event, the Earth-satellite-transient angle corresponding to maximum probability location is ~88 deg and hence is not occulted by Earth in satellite's frame. In a time interval of 100 sec around the event, the region of the localisation map which is not occulted by Earth in the satellite's frame has a cumulative probability of 0.86 (86%). CZTI data were de-trended to remove orbit-wise background variation. We then searched data from the four independent, identical quadrants to look for coincident spikes in the count rates. Searches were undertaken by binning the data in 0.1s, 1s, and 10s respectively. Statistical fluctuations in background count rates were estimated by using data from 10 (+-5) neighbouring orbits. We selected confidence levels such that the probability of a false trigger in a 1000 sec window is 10^-4. We do not find any evidence for any hard X-ray transient in this window, in the CZTI energy range of 20-200 keV. We use a detailed mass model of the satellite to calculate the direction-dependent instrument response for points in the visible sky. We then assume the source is modelled as a power law with photon index alpha = -1, and convert our count rate upper limits to direction-dependent flux limits. We obtain the following upper limits for source flux in the 20-200 keV band by taking a probability weighted mean over the visible sky: 0.1 s: flux limit= 4.93e-06 ergs/cm^2/s; fluence limit = 4.93e-07 ergs/cm^2 1.0 s: flux limit= 1.59e-06 ergs/cm^2/s; fluence limit = 1.59e-06 ergs/cm^2 10.0 s: flux limit= 1.99e-07 ergs/cm^2/s; fluence limit = 1.99e-06 ergs/cm^2 CZTI is built by a TIFR-led consortium of institutes across India, including VSSC, ISAC, IUCAA, SAC and PRL. The Indian Space Research Organisation funded, managed and facilitated the project. //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 26875 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f : No significant candidates in TAROT - FRAM - GRANDMA observations DATE: 20/01/24 21:16:02 GMT FROM: Kanthanakorn Noysena at GRANDMA-n-TAROT D. Corre (IJCLab), S. Antier (APC), M. Blazek (HETH/IAA-CSIC), P. Hello (IJCLab), E. Howell (OzGrav-UWA), S. Karpov (FZU), M. Masek (FZU), M. Prouza (FZU), M. Boer (Artemis), N. Christensen (Artemis), L. Eymar (Artemis), A. Klotz (IRAP), K. Noysena (Artemis, IRAP), A. Coleiro (APC), M. Coughlin (UMN), D. Coward (OzGrav-UWA), J.G. Ducoin (IJCLab), B. Gendre (OzGrav-UWA), D. A. Kann (HETH/IAA-CSIC), N. Kochiashvili (Iliauni), C. Lachaud (APC), N. Leroy (IJCLab), C. Thoene (HETH/IAA-CSIC), D. Turpin (AIM-CEA), X. Wang (THU) report on behalf of the FRAM, TAROT and GRANDMA collaborations. We performed tiled observations of LIGO/Virgo S200114f event (#GCN26734) with the FRAM-Auger, FRAM-CTA-N, TAROT-Calern (TCA), TAROT-Chili (TCH), TAROT-Reunion (TRE) telescopes. FRAM-Auger is located at Pierre Auger Observatory. FRAM-CTA-N is located at Observatorio del Roque de los Muchachos. TCA is located at Calern site at the Cote d'Azur observatory. TCH is located at La Silla ESO observatory (LaS/ESO). TRE is located at Les Makes astronomical observatory. The following table shows for each telescope: the delay in minutes from the trigger, which filter is used, the field of view of the telescope in degrees and the typical limiting magnitude (AB mag) for a given exposure in seconds (s). +-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------+ | Telescope | Delay | Filter | f.o.v. | Limiting | | | [min] | | [deg] | Mag. | |-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------| | FRAM-Auger | 19 | R | 1.0 x 1.0 | 18.0 (60s) | | FRAM-CTA-N | 20 | R | 0.45 x 0.45 | 17.0 (90s) | | TCA | 934 | Clear | 1.9 x 1.9 | 18.0 (60s) | | TCH | 908 | Clear | 1.9 x 1.9 | 18.0 (60s) | | TRE | 901 | Clear | 4.2 x 4.2 | 17.0 (60s) | +-------------+---------+----------+-------------+------------+ We performed the following joint tiled observations [1] : +-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+ | Telescope | TStart | TEnd | RA | DEC | Proba | | | [UTC] | [UTC] | [deg] | [deg] | [%] | |-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------| | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.225 | 16.054 | 2.0 | | | 02:27:00 | 02:31:27 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.057 | 18.973 | 1.9 | | | 02:32:02 | 02:36:29 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.029 | 18.973 | 1.8 | | | 02:37:04 | 02:41:31 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.615 | 15.081 | 1.8 | | | 02:42:07 | 02:46:34 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.306 | 14.108 | 1.8 | | | 02:47:10 | 02:51:36 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.847 | 17.027 | 1.8 | | | 02:52:12 | 02:56:39 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.455 | 18.000 | 1.8 | | | 02:57:13 | 03:01:40 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.692 | 13.135 | 1.7 | | | 03:02:16 | 03:06:43 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.609 | 15.081 | 1.6 | | | 03:07:17 | 03:11:44 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.213 | 16.054 | 1.6 | | | 03:12:19 | 03:16:46 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.603 | 15.081 | 1.6 | | | 03:17:20 | 03:21:47 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.814 | 17.027 | 1.5 | | | 03:22:23 | 03:26:50 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.432 | 18.000 | 1.5 | | | 03:27:25 | 03:31:52 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.202 | 16.054 | 1.4 | | | 03:32:26 | 03:36:53 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.409 | 18.000 | 1.4 | | | 03:42:46 | 03:47:13 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.387 | 12.162 | 1.4 | | | 03:48:01 | 03:52:28 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.304 | 14.108 | 1.4 | | | 03:53:03 | 03:57:30 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.000 | 18.973 | 1.3 | | | 03:58:19 | 04:02:46 | | | | | FRAM-Auger | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.392 | 12.162 | 1.2 | | | 04:03:23 | 04:07:50 | | | | | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.810 | 15.516 | 0.8 | | | 02:27:27 | 02:31:33 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.823 | 16.827 | 0.8 | | | 02:31:51 | 02:35:57 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.850 | 14.643 | 0.8 | | | 02:36:20 | 02:40:26 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.136 | 16.827 | 0.8 | | | 02:41:27 | 02:45:33 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.558 | 17.151 | 0.7 | | | 02:46:35 | 02:50:41 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.526 | 14.643 | 0.7 | | | 02:51:03 | 02:55:09 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.120 | 17.701 | 0.7 | | | 02:55:38 | 02:59:44 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.607 | 17.701 | 0.7 | | | 03:00:03 | 03:04:09 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.792 | 15.516 | 0.7 | | | 03:04:25 | 03:08:31 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.497 | 19.011 | 0.7 | | | 03:08:49 | 03:12:55 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.834 | 14.643 | 0.6 | | | 03:13:32 | 03:17:38 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.456 | 16.827 | 0.6 | | | 03:18:33 | 03:22:39 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.166 | 13.332 | 0.6 | | | 03:23:23 | 03:27:29 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 108.782 | 19.885 | 0.5 | | | 03:27:56 | 03:32:02 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 110.173 | 19.885 | 0.5 | | | 03:32:24 | 03:36:29 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 111.654 | 14.643 | 0.5 | | | 03:37:40 | 03:41:46 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 111.621 | 15.516 | 0.5 | | | 03:42:10 | 03:46:16 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.811 | 20.534 | 0.5 | | | 03:46:42 | 03:50:48 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 107.769 | 16.827 | 0.5 | | | 03:51:26 | 03:55:32 | | | | | FRAM-CTA-N | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.632 | 15.841 | 0.4 | | | 03:59:12 | 04:03:18 | | | | | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | | TCA | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 85.803 | 8.351 | <0.1 | | | 17:41:19 | 19:42:25 | | | | | TCA | 2020-01-17 | 2020-01-17 | 110.208 | 16.723 | 6.9 | | | 21:04:58 | 21:11:18 | | | | | TCA | 2020-01-17 | 2020-01-17 | 109.521 | 14.867 | 6.7 | | | 21:14:59 | 21:19:09 | | | | | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-16 | 109.700 | 16.405 | 6.0 | | | 17:15:25 | 04:21:59 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-16 | 104.050 | 16.405 | 0.1 | | | 17:22:11 | 04:28:31 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 75.020 | 6.839 | 0.1 | | | 17:28:56 | 21:05:11 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-16 | 111.564 | 27.314 | <0.1 | | | 17:48:06 | 04:54:10 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 76.193 | 10.950 | <0.1 | | | 18:26:42 | 21:03:03 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 78.264 | -3.202 | <0.1 | | | 18:33:27 | 21:09:51 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 76.455 | -3.202 | <0.1 | | | 18:46:11 | 19:52:31 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 75.399 | 8.657 | 0.1 | | | 20:04:52 | 18:41:26 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 74.646 | 0.041 | 0.1 | | | 20:11:37 | 21:18:06 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 74.646 | -1.777 | <0.1 | | | 20:30:45 | 20:34:55 | | | | | TCH | 2020-01-15 | 2020-01-16 | 109.960 | 14.586 | 6.6 | | | 18:13:17 | 04:15:13 | | | | | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | ----- | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 111.429 | 16.364 | 21.1 | | | 17:09:18 | 23:15:34 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 108.837 | 12.273 | 13.1 | | | 17:22:30 | 23:28:53 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 113.023 | 12.273 | 6.2 | | | 17:34:51 | 23:41:07 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 108.000 | 24.545 | 3.6 | | | 17:48:01 | 23:54:24 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-16 | 114.146 | 20.455 | 2.0 | | | 18:00:24 | 00:06:41 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 107.586 | 8.182 | 1.3 | | | 18:13:36 | 19:19:47 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-16 | 115.714 | 16.364 | 0.8 | | | 18:25:54 | 00:32:10 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 81.818 | 4.091 | 0.7 | | | 18:39:08 | 18:45:23 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 82.759 | 8.182 | 0.7 | | | 18:51:24 | 18:57:40 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 79.535 | 12.273 | 0.5 | | | 19:04:36 | 19:10:52 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 58.378 | -32.727 | 0.5 | | | 19:16:59 | 19:23:14 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 81.818 | 0.000 | 0.4 | | | 19:30:13 | 19:36:29 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 103.500 | 24.545 | 0.4 | | | 19:42:29 | 19:48:45 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-14 | 109.756 | 20.455 | 16.7 | | | 22:15:54 | 22:22:09 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-14 | 2020-01-15 | 104.651 | 12.273 | 0.7 | | | 23:45:02 | 19:51:19 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-15 | 2020-01-15 | 107.532 | 28.636 | 0.5 | | | 20:23:20 | 20:29:38 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-15 | 2020-01-15 | 83.721 | 12.273 | 0.4 | | | 20:36:32 | 20:42:49 | | | | | TRE | 2020-01-15 | 2020-01-15 | 73.636 | 4.091 | 0.4 | | | 20:48:55 | 20:55:10 | | | | +-------------+------------+------------+---------+---------+---------+ TStart and TEnd refers respectively to the time of the first and last exposure for a given tile. Observations are not necessarily continuous in this interval. The Probability refers to the 2D spatial probability of the GW skymap enclosed in a given tile. These observations cover about 77.3% of the cumulative probability of the CWB skymap created on 2020-01-14 02:11:51 (UTC). The coverage map is available at: https://grandma-owncloud.lal.in2p3.fr/index.php/s/XgtMhPRxcyL09gR/download?path=%2F&files=GRANDMA_S200114f_1579885403.png No significant transient candidates were found during our low latency analysis [2,3]. GRANDMA (Global Rapid Advanced Network Devoted to the Multi-messenger Addicts) is a network of robotic telescopes connected all over the world with both photometry and spectrometry capabilities for Time- domain Astronomy [2](https://grandma.lal.in2p3.fr/). Details on the different telescopes are available on the GRANDMA web pages. [1] M. W Coughlin et al., MNRAS 2019, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz2485 [2] S. Antier et al., MNRAS 2019, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stz3142 [3] K. Noysena et al., ApJ 2019, arXiv:1910.02770 //////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// TITLE: GCN CIRCULAR NUMBER: 27073 SUBJECT: LIGO/Virgo S200114f: Gemini Spectra of AT 2020vu, AT 2020vw, AT 2020vy, and AT 2020vz DATE: 20/02/15 02:15:40 GMT FROM: Curtis McCully at Las Cumbres Observatory Curtis McCully (LCO), Daichi Hiramatsu (LCO/UCSB), Jamison Burke (LCO/UCSB), Jennifer Andrews (UA), Craig Peligrino (LCO/UCSB), D. Andrew Howell (LCO/UCSB), Iair Arcavi (Tel Aviv University), Reinaldo de Carvalho: (Unicid/Unicsul), Francisco Förster (Universidad de Chile), Ryan Foley (UCSC), David Coulter (UCSC), Charles Kilpatrick (UCSC), David Sand (UA), Stefano Valenti (UC Davis), Marcelle Soares-Santos (Brandeis), Sandro Rembold (UFSM), Armin Rest (STSci), Daniel Kasen (UC Berkeley), Brian Metzger (Columbia), Anthony Piro (Carnegie Obs.), Eliot Quataert (UC Berkeley), Enrico Ramirez-Ruiz (UCSC), J. Craig Wheeler (UT Austin), Franz Bauer (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile), Joshua Bloom (UC Berkeley), Thomas Brink (UC Berkeley), Jeff Cooke (Swinburne University of Technology), Alejandro Clocchiatti (Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile), Alexei V. Filippenko (UC Berkeley), Wendy Freedman (University of Chicago), Peter Garnavich (Notre Dame), Jorge Ernesto Horvath (Universidade de Sao Paulo), Saurabh Jha (Rutgers), Robert Kirshner (Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation), Kevin Krisciunas (Texas A&M), Huan Lin (FNAL), Barry Madore (Carnegie Obs.), Martin Makler (Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas Físicas), Gautham Narayan (UIUC), Xavier Prochaska (UCSC), Adam Riess (STSci), Riccardo Sturani (UFRN), Nicholas Suntzeff (Texas A&M), Masaomi Tanaka (Tohoku University), Douglas Tucker (FNAL), Jozsef Vinko (Konkoly Observatory), Lifan Wang (Texas A&M), Carlos Contreras (STSci), Chris D'Andrea (UPenn), Georgios Dimitriadis (UCSC), David Jones (UCSC), Michael Lundquist (UA), Felipe Olivares (INCT/UDA), Antonella Palmese (FNAL), Yen-Chen Pan: (NAOJ), Daniel Scolnic (University of Chicago), WeiKang Zheng (UC Berkeley), Antonio Bernardo (Universidade de Sao Paulo), K. Azalee Bostroem (UC Davis), Ariadna Murguia Berthier (UCSC), Ósmar Rodríguez (Universidad Nacional Andres Bello), César Rojas-Bravo (UCSC), Matthew Siebert (UCSC), and Iruatã Souza (Centro Brasileiro de Pesquisas) Following the detection of S200114f (LIGO/Virgo Collaboration, GCN 26734), the Zwicky Transient Facility reported a list of possible optical counterparts (Andreoni et al., GCN 26741). We triggered our follow-up program on the Gemini Telescopes (GS-2019B-Q-115; PI McCully) to classify the candidates. We obtained optical spectra of AT 2020vu, 2020vw, 2020vy, and 2020vz using the GMOS instrument on Gemini South. These targets were chosen because they were visible from Chile as Gemini North was closed due to bad weather. They were observed consecutively starting at 2020-01-16 01:55 UTC, less than 48 hours after merger detection. These targets were triggered using the TOM Toolkit (Street et al., 2018, arXiv 1806.09557) through Gemini's programmatic interface. The spectra were reduced using a combination of Gemini IRAF tasks and custom Python routines (https://github.com/cmccully/lcogtgemini). We used both SNID (Blondin & Tonry 2007, ApJ, 666, 1024) and Superfit (Howell et al. 2005, ApJ, 634, 1190) to classify these transients. Throughout, we adopt a Hubble constant of H_0 = 71 km/s/Mpc and a flat cosmological model with a dark energy density of 0.7. The classifications and spectra have been uploaded to the Transient Name Server (TNS). For AT 2020vz, we find a best fit using Superfit of SN 2005cl, a Type IIn SN, at +15 days with redshift z = 0.25. This corresponds to an absolute magnitude of -19.4, consistent with this type of supernova. https://wis-tns.weizmann.ac.il/object/2020vz AT 2020vy was best fit by SN 1999aa before peak brightness at z = 0.24. At this redshift, the source has an absolute magnitude of -19.2, consistent with a SN Ia. https://wis-tns.weizmann.ac.il/object/2020vy AT 2020vu is consistent with a quasar. The spectrum exhibits a strong, broad feature near 5360 A. Assuming this is Mg II, the quasar is at z = 0.91. At this redshift, there are also spectral features consistent with the hydrogen Balmer series and [O III]. https://wis-tns.weizmann.ac.il/object/2020vu For AT 2020vw, the best fit is with a normal SN Ia near peak brightness at z = 0.23, consistent with the absolute magnitude estimate of -19.0 at that distance. https://wis-tns.weizmann.ac.il/object/2020vw Therefore, we conclude that all of these transients (AT 2020vy, 2020vz, 2020vu, and 2020vw) are not associated with the GW alert S200114f. We thank the Gemini team for their rapid response and assistance in obtaining these observations.