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Follow Up of GW170817 and Its Electromagnetic Counterpart by Australian-Led Observing Programmes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 December 2017

I. Andreoni*
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) Australian Astronomical Observatory, 105 Delhi Rd, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia
K. Ackley
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) Monash Centre of Astrophysics, Monash University, VIC 3800, Australia School of Physics & Astronomy, Monash University, VIC 3800, Australia
J. Cooke
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO)
A. Acharyya
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
J. R. Allison
Affiliation:
Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO 3D)
G. E. Anderson
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
M. C. B. Ashley
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of New South Wales, NSW 2052, Australia
D. Baade
Affiliation:
European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere (ESO), Karl-Schwarzschild-Str. 2, 85748 Garching bei München, Germany
M. Bailes
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav)
K. Bannister
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
A. Beardsley
Affiliation:
School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA
M. S. Bessell
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
F. Bian
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
P. A. Bland
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
M. Boer
Affiliation:
Artémis/Observatoire de la Cote d’Azur/CNRS, Boulevard de l’Observatoire CS 34229 - F 06304 NICE Cedex 4, France
T. Booler
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
A. Brandeker
Affiliation:
Department of Astronomy, Stockholm University, Albanova, SE 10691 Stockholm, Sweden
I. S. Brown
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI 53201, USA
D. A. H. Buckley
Affiliation:
South African Astronomical Observatory, PO Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa
S.-W. Chang
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
D. M. Coward
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
S. Crawford
Affiliation:
South African Astronomical Observatory, PO Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa
H. Crisp
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
B. Crosse
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
A. Cucchiara
Affiliation:
University of the Virgin Islands, 2 John Brewer’s Bay, 00802 St Thomas, US Virgin Islands, USA
M. Cupák
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
J. S. de Gois
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
A. Deller
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia
H. A. R. Devillepoix
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
D. Dobie
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
E. Elmer
Affiliation:
School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
D. Emrich
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
W. Farah
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia
T. J. Farrell
Affiliation:
Australian Astronomical Observatory, 105 Delhi Rd, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia
T. Franzen
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, 26 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington WA 6152, Australia
B. M. Gaensler
Affiliation:
Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, University of Toronto, ON, M5S 3H4, Canada
D. K. Galloway
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) Monash Centre of Astrophysics, Monash University, VIC 3800, Australia School of Physics & Astronomy, Monash University, VIC 3800, Australia
B. Gendre
Affiliation:
Artémis/Observatoire de la Cote d’Azur/CNRS, Boulevard de l’Observatoire CS 34229 - F 06304 NICE Cedex 4, France University of the Virgin Islands, 2 John Brewer’s Bay, 00802 St Thomas, US Virgin Islands, USA
T. Giblin
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, 2354 Fairchild Drive, U.S. Air Force Academy, CO 80840, USA
A. Goobar
Affiliation:
The Oskar Klein Centre, Department of Physics, Stockholm University, Albanova, SE 106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
J. Green
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
P. J. Hancock
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
B. A. D. Hartig
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
E. J. Howell
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
L. Horsley
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
A. Hotan
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, 26 Dick Perry Avenue, Kensington WA 6152, Australia
R. M. Howie
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
L. Hu
Affiliation:
Purple Mountain Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China
Y. Hu
Affiliation:
Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100012, China
C. W. James
Affiliation:
Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
S. Johnston
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
M. Johnston-Hollitt
Affiliation:
Peripety Scientific Ltd., PO Box 11355 Manners Street, Wellington, 6142, New Zealand
D. L. Kaplan
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI 53201, USA
M. Kasliwal
Affiliation:
Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
E. F. Keane
Affiliation:
SKA Organisation, Jodrell Bank Observatory, SK11 9DL, UK
D. Kenney
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
A. Klotz
Affiliation:
IRAP (CNRS/UPS) 34 ave. Edouard Belin, 31400 Toulouse, France
R. Lau
Affiliation:
Division of Physics, Mathematics and Astronomy, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, USA
R. Laugier
Affiliation:
Artémis/Observatoire de la Cote d’Azur/CNRS, Boulevard de l’Observatoire CS 34229 - F 06304 NICE Cedex 4, France
E. Lenc
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
X. Li
Affiliation:
Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China Nanjing Institute of Astronomical Optics and Technology, Nanjing 210042, China
E. Liang
Affiliation:
School of Astronomy and Space Science and Key Laboratory of Modern Astronomy and Astrophysics in Ministry of Education, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China
C. Lidman
Affiliation:
Australian Astronomical Observatory, 105 Delhi Rd, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia
L. C. Luvaul
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
C. Lynch
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
B. Ma
Affiliation:
National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100012, China
D. Macpherson
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
J. Mao
Affiliation:
Yunnan Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 650011 Kunming, Yunnan Province, China
D. E. McClelland
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) Research School of Physics and Engineering, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
C. McCully
Affiliation:
Las Cumbres Observatory, 6740 Cortona Dr., Suite 102, Goleta, CA 93117-5575, USA Department of Physics, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106-9530, USA
A. Möller
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
M. F. Morales
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA
D. Morris
Affiliation:
University of the Virgin Islands, 2 John Brewer’s Bay, 00802 St Thomas, US Virgin Islands, USA
T. Murphy
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
K. Noysena
Affiliation:
Artémis/Observatoire de la Cote d’Azur/CNRS, Boulevard de l’Observatoire CS 34229 - F 06304 NICE Cedex 4, France IRAP (CNRS/UPS) 34 ave. Edouard Belin, 31400 Toulouse, France
C. A. Onken
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
N. B. Orange
Affiliation:
OrangeWave Innovative Science LLC, Moncks Corner, SC 29461, USA
S. Osłowski
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia
D. Pallot
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
J. Paxman
Affiliation:
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
S. B. Potter
Affiliation:
South African Astronomical Observatory, PO Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa
T. Pritchard
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia
W. Raja
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
R. Ridden-Harper
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
E. Romero-Colmenero
Affiliation:
South African Astronomical Observatory, PO Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa Southern African Large Telescope Foundation, P.O. Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa
E. M. Sadler
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Sydney Institute for Astronomy, School of Physics, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
E. K. Sansom
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
R. A. Scalzo
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia Centre for Translational Data Science, University of Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
B. P. Schmidt
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
S. M. Scott
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) Research School of Physics and Engineering, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
N. Seghouani
Affiliation:
Centre de Recherche en Astronomie, Astrophysique et Géophysique, BP 63, Route de l’Observatoire, Bouzareah, 16340, Alger, Algeria
Z. Shang
Affiliation:
Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China National Astronomical Observatories, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100012, China Tianjin Normal University, Tianjin 300074, China
R. M. Shannon
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
L. Shao
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University, 5 Yiheyuan Road, Haidian District, Beijing 100871, P. R. China
M. M. Shara
Affiliation:
Department of Astrophysics, American Museum of Natural History, Central Park West and 79th Street, New York, NY 10024, USA Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 0HA, UK
R. Sharp
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
M. Sokolowski
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
J. Sollerman
Affiliation:
Department of Astronomy, Stockholm University, Albanova, SE 10691 Stockholm, Sweden
J. Staff
Affiliation:
University of the Virgin Islands, 2 John Brewer’s Bay, 00802 St Thomas, US Virgin Islands, USA
K. Steele
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
T. Sun
Affiliation:
Purple Mountain Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China
N. B. Suntzeff
Affiliation:
George P. and Cynthia Woods Mitchell Institute for Fundamental Physics & Astronomy, Texas A. & M. University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 4242 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843, USA
C. Tao
Affiliation:
Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS/IN2P3, CPPM, Marseille 13288, France Physics Department and Tsinghua Center for Astrophysics, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China
S. Tingay
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
M. C. Towner
Affiliation:
Department of Applied Geology, Curtin University, GPO Box U1987, Perth, WA 6845, Australia
P. Thierry
Affiliation:
Observatoire d’Auragne, 31190 Auragne, France
C. Trott
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
B. E. Tucker
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
P. Väisänen
Affiliation:
South African Astronomical Observatory, PO Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa Southern African Large Telescope Foundation, P.O. Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa
V. Venkatraman Krishnan
Affiliation:
Centre for Astrophysics and Supercomputing, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, H29, Hawthorn, VIC 3122, Australia The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO)
M. Walker
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
L. Wang
Affiliation:
Purple Mountain Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China George P. and Cynthia Woods Mitchell Institute for Fundamental Physics & Astronomy, Texas A. & M. University, Department of Physics and Astronomy, 4242 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843, USA
X. Wang
Affiliation:
Physics Department and Tsinghua Center for Astrophysics, Tsinghua University, Beijing, 100084, China
R. Wayth
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
M. Whiting
Affiliation:
ATNF, CSIRO Astronomy and Space Science, PO Box 76, Epping, NSW 1710, Australia
A. Williams
Affiliation:
International Centre for Radio Astronomy Research, Curtin University, Bentley WA 6102, Australia
T. Williams
Affiliation:
South African Astronomical Observatory, PO Box 9, 7935 Observatory, South Africa
C. Wolf
Affiliation:
The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav) The Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-Sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO) Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
C. Wu
Affiliation:
School of Physics, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia
X. Wu
Affiliation:
Purple Mountain Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China
J. Yang
Affiliation:
Purple Mountain Observatory, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing 210008, China
X. Yuan
Affiliation:
Chinese Center for Antarctic Astronomy, Nanjing 210008, China Nanjing Institute of Astronomical Optics and Technology, Nanjing 210042, China
H. Zhang
Affiliation:
School of Astronomy and Space Science and Key Laboratory of Modern Astronomy and Astrophysics in Ministry of Education, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China
J. Zhou
Affiliation:
School of Astronomy and Space Science and Key Laboratory of Modern Astronomy and Astrophysics in Ministry of Education, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China
H. Zovaro
Affiliation:
Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, The Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2611, Australia
*
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Abstract

The discovery of the first electromagnetic counterpart to a gravitational wave signal has generated follow-up observations by over 50 facilities world-wide, ushering in the new era of multi-messenger astronomy. In this paper, we present follow-up observations of the gravitational wave event GW170817 and its electromagnetic counterpart SSS17a/DLT17ck (IAU label AT2017gfo) by 14 Australian telescopes and partner observatories as part of Australian-based and Australian-led research programs. We report early- to late-time multi-wavelength observations, including optical imaging and spectroscopy, mid-infrared imaging, radio imaging, and searches for fast radio bursts. Our optical spectra reveal that the transient source emission cooled from approximately 6 400 K to 2 100 K over a 7-d period and produced no significant optical emission lines. The spectral profiles, cooling rate, and photometric light curves are consistent with the expected outburst and subsequent processes of a binary neutron star merger. Star formation in the host galaxy probably ceased at least a Gyr ago, although there is evidence for a galaxy merger. Binary pulsars with short (100 Myr) decay times are therefore unlikely progenitors, but pulsars like PSR B1534+12 with its 2.7 Gyr coalescence time could produce such a merger. The displacement (~2.2 kpc) of the binary star system from the centre of the main galaxy is not unusual for stars in the host galaxy or stars originating in the merging galaxy, and therefore any constraints on the kick velocity imparted to the progenitor are poor.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Astronomical Society of Australia 2017 

1 INTRODUCTION

The first detection of an electromagnetic (EM) counterpart to a gravitational wave (GW) event has led to the new era of GW multi-messenger astrophysics. The close coordination of LIGO data analysis groups and multiple observational teams worldwide via the restricted Gamma-Ray Coordinates Network (GCN) reports under confidential Memoranda of Understanding (MoU), were key to the prompt identification and detailed multi-wavelength follow up of the counterpart.

On 2017 August 17 12:41:04Footnote 1 , the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (aLIGO) interferometers detected a GW signal G298048, now referred to as GW170817 (Abbott et al. Reference Abbott2017c, Reference Abbott2017d, Reference Abbott2017e, Reference Abbott2017f, Reference Abbott2017g, Reference Abbott2017a). The Advanced-Virgo (aVirgo) interferometer was online at the time of the discovery and also contributed to the localisation of the GW event. On 2017 August 17 12:41:06, about 2 s after the GW detection, the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) instrument on board the Fermi satellite independently detected a short gamma-ray burst, labelled as GRB 170817A (Connaughton et al. Reference Connaughton2017; Goldstein et al. Reference Goldstein2017a; Goldstein et al. Reference Goldstein2017b; von Kienlin et al. Reference Kienlin2017). The INTErnational Gamma-Ray Astrophysics Laboratory (INTEGRAL) also detected GRB 170817A (Savchenko et al. Reference Savchenko2017a; Savchenko et al. Reference Savchenko2017b), providing unique information especially when the data were combined with those obtained with Fermi (Abbott et al. Reference Abbott2017b). The close temporal coincidence of the gamma-ray burst and GW event made it a compelling target for follow-up observations at other wavelengths.

The One-Meter, Two-Hemisphere project (1M2H) first announced the discovery of a transient in an image acquired with the 1-m Swope telescope at Las Campanas Observatory in Chile on 2017 August 17 at 23:33, 10.87 h after the LIGO detection. However, the optical counterpart to GW170817 (and GRB 170817A) was already imaged independently by six other programmes before this report. The 1M2H team referred to the transient with the name Swope Supernova Survey 2017a (SSS17a, Coulter et al. Reference Coulter2017b, Reference Coulter2017a). Details about the other independent detections can be found in Allam et al. (Reference Allam2017) for the Dark Energy Camera, Valenti et al. (Reference Valenti2017) and Yang et al. (Reference Yang2017) for the Distance Less Than 40 Mpc survey (DLT40), Arcavi et al. (Reference Arcavi2017a) and Arcavi et al. (Reference Arcavi2017b) for the Las Cumbres Observatory, Tanvir et al. (Reference Tanvir2017a) and (Reference Tanvir2017b) for the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy, Lipunov et al. (Reference Lipunov2017a) and (Reference Lipunov2017b) for the MASTER discoveries.

Lipunov et al. (Reference Lipunov2017b) offer an extensive review of the world-wide follow up. The optical transient is located at RA = 13:09:48.089 DEC = −23:22:53.350 (Adams et al. Reference Adams2017; Kasliwal et al. Reference Kasliwal2017), approximately 2.2 kpc from the centre of its host galaxy NGC 4993. The host is a nearby E/S0 galaxy at z = 0.009727, corresponding to a distance of ~39.5 Mpc (Freedman et al. Reference Freedman2001). Hereafter, we refer to the EM counterpart of GW170817 with the IAU label AT2017gfo.

Short-duration GRBs (sGRBs, a class first identified by Kouveliotou et al. Reference Kouveliotou, Meegan, Fishman, Bhat, Briggs, Koshut, Paciesas and Pendleton1993) were previously suggested to be associated with merging compact objects, such as a binary neutron star (BNS) system or neutron star-black hole (NSBH) system (e.g., Paczynski Reference Paczynski1986; Goodman Reference Goodman1986; Eichler et al. Reference Eichler, Livio, Piran and Schramm1989). Electromagnetically, such mergers are also postulated to generate a relatively rapidly evolving optical/infrared transient—referred to as kilonova or macronova (e.g., Li & Paczyński Reference Li and Paczyński1998; Metzger et al. Reference Metzger2010; Roberts et al. Reference Roberts, Kasen, Lee and Ramirez-Ruiz2011; Barnes & Kasen Reference Barnes and Kasen2013; Tanaka & Hotokezaka Reference Tanaka and Hotokezaka2013; Kasen, Fernández, & Metzger Reference Kasen, Fernández and Metzger2015; Metzger et al. Reference Metzger, Bauswein, Goriely and Kasen2015; Barnes et al. Reference Barnes, Kasen, Wu and Martínez-Pinedo2016). The combination of an sGRB and kilonova is considered the ‘smoking gun’ signature of such mergers. Kilonova candidates were previously identified during the follow up of sGRBs, for example, GRB 080503 (Perley et al. Reference Perley2009; Gao et al. Reference Gao, Ding, Wu, Dai and Zhang2015), GRB 130603B (Berger, Fong, & Chornock Reference Berger, Fong and Chornock2013; Tanvir et al. Reference Tanvir, Levan, Fruchter, Hjorth, Hounsell, Wiersema and Tunnicliffe2013; Hotokezaka et al. Reference Hotokezaka, Kyutoku, Tanaka, Kiuchi, Sekiguchi, Shibata and Wanajo2013), and GRB 050709 (Jin et al. Reference Jin2016). However, no kilonova candidates have been discovered unrelated to GRB triggers, despite their anticipated isotropic emission, unlike that of sGRBs. BNS, and NSBH mergers, thus sGRBs, and subsequent kilonovae, are expected to be the most promising GW events to exhibit EM counterparts.

Previous work has discussed the importance of rapid response (e.g., Chu et al. Reference Chu, Howell, Rowlinson, Gao, Zhang, Tingay, Boër and Wen2016) and collaborative strategies to maximise the chances of success in the EM follow up of aLIGO and Virgo triggers. Specifically, Howell et al. (Reference Howell2015) presents the role that Australia can play in this context. The association of GW170817 to GRB 170817A, detected during the LIGO and Virgo Collaboration (LVC) ‘O2’ run, has enabled the first multi-messenger (EM multi-wavelength, neutrino, and GW observations) study of an astrophysical event (Lipunov et al. Reference Lipunov2017b).

This paper presents and discusses the data acquired during the search for an EM counterpart to GW170817 and the follow up of the now confirmed counterpart, AT2017gfo, by 14 observing programmes led by Australian institutions and researchers. The observing programmes include facilities and collaborators associated with the Australia Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics (CAASTROFootnote 2 ), the ARC Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGravFootnote 3 ), and the multi-wavelength, multi-facility Deeper, Wider, Faster (DWFFootnote 4 ) programme. In Section 2, we summarise the observations from the telescopes/instruments that participated in the GW170817 follow up, including optical, mid-infrared, and radio imaging and spectroscopic observations. In Section 3, we provide an overview of the spectroscopic observations of the event and host galaxy and preliminary comparisons of our observations with theoretical sGRB afterglow and kilonova models. Finally, we present a discussion and summary and in Section 4.

2 FACILITIES INVOLVED IN THE EM FOLLOW UP OF GW170817

The following sections describe the optical, mid-infrared (mIR), and radio telescopes, instruments, and relevant observations involved in the follow up of the GW170817 EM counterpart by Australian or Australian-led programmes.

Shortly after the LVC community was alerted to the GW event, many of the facilities discussed here were triggered into action for follow-up observations. However, NGC 4993 and the bulk of the LVC error ellipse had set in Eastern Australia and the Zadko telescope in Western Australia was temporarily not operational. On the following day, the location of the optical counterpart AT2017gfo was known. Radio telescopes were on the field that day and optical facilities were on the field shortly after sunset. Figure 1 presents the broad temporal coverage of the GW event by our spectroscopic, radio, and optical/mIR observations that extend from early to late times. The general characteristics of each facility is presented in Table 1 and details of the corresponding observations are listed in Tables 2–15.

Figure 1. Observation timeline for the facilities presented in this paper showing the time of observation offset from the GW event and the nominal length of the reported observations. Spectroscopic observations are shown in green, radio observations in orange, and optical and mid-infrared are in blue.

Table 1. Facilities participating in the follow-up observations summarised in this paper. Principal references for the relevant data from each facility are indicated in the right-most column. We specify under which programme the observations were taken when multiple groups used the same telescope to follow up GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

a Observations initiated, or proposed for, via collaboration with DWF programme.

b Programme CX391.

c Programme BD218.

d Programme D0010.

Table 2. AST3-2 observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 3. Zadko observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 4. Etelman/VIRT observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 5. ESO VLT observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo (Kasliwal et al. in preparation).

Table 6. SkyMapper Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo with photometric measurements. The SkyMapper follow up is not limited to the data points presented in this table. The results from the analysis of the complete dataset will be discussed in future publications.

Table 7. ASKAP Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 8. ATCA Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 9. ATCA measured flux densities for NGC 4993.

Table 10. MWA Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 11. Parkes observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo searching for FRBs.

Table 12. VLBA observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 13. ANU2.3/WiFeS observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 14. SALT/RSS observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Table 15. AAT/AAOmega+2dF observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

2.1. Optical/near-infrared imaging

2.1.1. SkyMapper

SkyMapper (Keller et al. Reference Keller2007) is a 1.35-m modified-Cassegrain telescope located at Siding Spring Observatory in New South Wales, Australia, which is owned and operated by the Australian National University (ANU). The camera has a 5.7 deg2 field of view, a pixel scale of 0.5 arcsec/pixel and six photometric filters in the uvgriz system, which span the visible and ultraviolet bands from 325 to 960 nm. Typical single-epoch 5σ limiting magnitudes for each filter are u = 19.5, v = 19.5, g = 21, r = 21, i = 20, and z = 19, over 100 s exposure times. Since 2014, SkyMapper has conducted a full-hemisphere Southern sky survey in all six bands (see Wolf et al. in preparation; http://skymapper.anu.edu.au). Alongside this survey, the SkyMapper Transient Survey (SMT) has been performing a survey dedicated to supernovae and other transients (Scalzo et al. Reference Scalzo2017).

SkyMapper first received the GW trigger when the target area had recently set in Eastern Australia and began observing relevant target ranges shortly after sunset the following night. The follow-up strategy included two components: (1) to obtain uvgriz photometry of the field containing AT2017gfo, in the event that the transient was the correct counterpart to the GW trigger, and (2) to image the 90% probability region (85 deg2) of the LVC sky-map to search for other counterpart candidates (Figure 2).

Figure 2. Footprints of SkyMapper observations in two different follow-up modes: one using the blind search of new transient sources where fields overlap with GW localisation map (grey squares) and the other using the targeted observation of the optical counterpart, AT2017gfo, discovered by other EM follow-up groups (yellow square). The positions of AT2017gfo and its host galaxy (NGC 4993) are indicated on the figure. The red dots are target galaxies from the 6dFGS catalogue that were prioritised by their position and spectroscopic redshift.

Archival images at the coordinates of AT2017gfo were found from the SkyMapper Southern Sky Survey and the SMT from 2015 August 8 to 2017 July 22. We found no evidence of a pre-existing source or variability in the images coincident with AT2017gfo to a 95% upper limit of i ~19.6 and r ~20.5 (Figure 3; Möller et al. Reference Möller2017).

Figure 3. SkyMapper optical images of NGC 4993 (left centre) ~26 d before and ~1 d after the detection of AT2017gfo. The images are oriented with North up and East to the left and are cropped to 2 arcmin on a side, with the position of AT2017gfo marked. The image taken on 2017 July 22 is in i-band, the image taken on 2017 August 18 (where the transient is visible) is in r-band.

Imaging of the LVC skymap started at 2017-08-18 09:04:56 in the uvgriz filters with t exp = 100 s. The images of AT2017gfo were taken between 2017-08-18 09:16:58 and 2017-08-18 10:00 UT in all bands (Figure 4). The observations were taken at an airmass above 2 and roughly half of the primary mirror was vignetted by the telescope dome. As a result of dome seeing and high airmass, the images have a seeing FWHM of 3.5–6 arcsec in i/z-bands to u-band. Nevertheless, the transient AT2017gfo was immediately confirmed visually on raw frames in all six bands. Preliminary photometric AB magnitudes are given as u = 17.9 ± 0.15, v = 17.9 ± 0.10, g = 17.76 ± 0.05, r = 17.20 ± 0.05, and i = 16.0 ± 0.30, respectively (Wolf et al. Reference Wolf2017a).

Figure 4. Optical light curve of AT2017gfo for the first week after the GW detection obtained with the AST3-2, SkyMapper (SM), Zadko, and Etelman/VIRT telescopes. Down arrows indicate upper limits. Note that the evolution at bluer bands is faster than the evolution at redder bands. Dashed vertical lines indicate epochs when spectroscopy was acquired. Spectra analysed in this work and presented in Figures 7 and 8 are indicated in black, whereas spectra marked in grey were obtained but are to be published at a later time, as they were acquired in a different mode than the first and require a different analysis.

Observations of the source continued between 2017-08-18 and 2017-08-22, at which point AT2017gfo could no longer be visually identified in uvg bands. Imaging was attempted again between 2017-08-28 and 2017-09-03 to obtain images for host galaxy subtraction, but was unsuccessful. A total of 83 successful exposures were taken with exposure times of 100 s for bands griz and up to 300 s, for uv. Host galaxy images in all filters are planned when the target re-appears from behind the Sun.

2.1.2. AST3-2

The Antarctic Schmidt Telescope (AST3) project comprises three 68 cm (50 cm non-vignetted aperture) equatorial-mount telescopes located at the Kunlun Station at Dome A, Antarctica (Cui, Yuan, & Gong Reference Cui, Yuan, Gong, Stepp and Gilmozzi2008).

The second of the AST3 telescopes, AST3-2, employs a 10 K×10 K STA1600FT camera with a pixel scale of 1 arcsec pixel−1 and a 4.14° field of view. The AST3-2 observations presented in this paper were performed as part of the DWF programme (PI Cooke). Most facilities following AT2017gfo were only able to monitor the source for 1–2 h per night as a result of its position near the Sun. The location of AST3-2 is advantageous in that it can monitor the source over longer periods of time as the source moved low along the horizon. The disadvantages are that the source was always at high airmass and the dark Antarctic winter was ending.

Observations targeting the GW counterpart AT2017gfo span from 2017-08-18 to 2017-08-28 in SDSS-i filter. A total of 262 exposures were acquired, each with an exposure time of 300 s per image, except for the initial five images having exposure time of 60 s, with approximately 54 s between exposures. AST3-2 detected AT2017gfo on 2017-08-18 with an average i-band magnitude of 17.23+0.22 −0.21, 17.61+0.16 −0.16, and 17.72+0.18 −0.17 from co-added images. The uncertainties of these measurements include the 0.088 mag errors of the zero-point calibration. The AST3-2 circular, Hu et al. (Reference Hu2017a), reports g-band magnitudes, however, this must be corrected to the i-band magnitudes that we report here. Detections and upper limits estimated in the following observations are presented in Figure 4 and Table 2.

2.1.3. Zadko

The 1-m Zadko Telescope (Coward et al. Reference Coward2010) is located just north of Perth in Western Australia. The CCD imager has a pixel scale of 0.69 arcsec pixel−1 (binning 1 × 1) resulting in a field of view of 0.15 deg2 and reaches an approximate limiting magnitude of 21 in the R-band in 180 s.

The TAROT–Zadko–Aures–C2PU collaboration (TZAC) joins the efforts of partners located in Australia (Zadko), France (with TAROT telescopes in France, Chile and La Réunion Island, C2PU in France), and Algeria (Aurès Observatory, under construction). The initial position of GW 170817 was monitored using the TCH (TAROT-Chile) 25-cm rapid robotic telescope prior to Zadko imaging.

Zadko observations of AT2017gfo commenced on 2017-08-19 10:57 and extended until 2017-08-26 11:43 in the Clear (C) and r filters, with 120 s exposures and 2 × 2 binning. The object was observed for ~1 h at the onset of dusk each night, until its low elevation precluded observations.

We stacked all images taken each night to increase the signal-to-noise ratio under the assumption that the brightness of the object does not vary significantly during 1 h. As AT2017gfo is located at 10 arcsec from the nucleus of NGC 4993 (i.e. 7 pixels), the background varies steeply. For accurate photometry, a galaxy reference image without AT2017gfo was subtracted to retrieve a flat background. The reference image was created from the stack of images taken on the last night (i.e., nine nights after the GW trigger) when the source was no longer visible. The photometry was performed on the subtracted image taking the point spread function (PSF) of the star NOMAD-1 0666-0296321 (RA=197h28m44.96s, Dec=–23°21′49.70″ J2000.0, m R =15.580). Photometric results are presented in Coward et al. (Reference Coward2017), Figure 4, and Table 3.

2.1.4. University of virgin islands Etelman observatory

The Virgin Islands Robotic Telescope (VIRT) is a 0.5-m Cassegrain telescope located at the Etelman Observatory in the U. S. Virgin Islands. The observations with VIRT presented in this paper were performed in association with the DWF programme. VIRT is equipped with a Marconi 42-20 CCD imager that has a pixel scale of 0.5 arcsec pixel−1, a field of view of 0.11 deg2, and imaging in the UBVRI and ND filters.

Observations of AT2017gfo commenced on 2017-08-19 23:19 in the R and Clear (C) filters. At approximately 2017-08-19 23:54, a potential counterpart was observed in the C filter. Calculation of the precise source magnitude is limited due to the galaxy contamination in the observing band (Gendre et al. Reference Gendre2017). Additional observations were carried out on 2017-08-20 00:12 and 2017-08-22 00:00 with the C filter, where a possible first detection of the source was made on 2017-08-20 m C = 18.90 ± 0.28 (Figure 4). Inclement tropical weather (hurricane Irma, followed by hurricane Maria) delayed full analysis of the observations, however, the measurements made to date are listed in Table 4.

2.1.5. The desert fireball network

The Desert Fireball Network (DFN, Day & Bland Reference Day and Bland2016) is a network of 50 remote cameras located in the Western and South Australian desert designed for the detection and triangulation of Fireballs and bright meteors. Each DFN camera consists of a Nikon D800E camera equipped with a Samyang 8 mm f/3.5 UMC Fish-eye CS II lens. The cameras capture full sky images with a cadence of 30 s from sunset to sunrise every night of the year.

Observations from Wooleen Station are available from 2 min before the GW170817 trigger and, as a result, DFN is the only optical facility imaging the source during the GW detection. Between 12:39:28 and 12:49:28, the host galaxy was observed at an elevation of 20°. Initial analysis of the images finds no persistent or transient sources in a 3° radius of NGC 4993, to a limiting magnitude of mag v = 4 (Hancock et al. Reference Hancock2017). Further calibration and analysis have brought this limiting magnitude down to mag v = 6.

2.1.6. ESO VLT/NACO mid-IR

The ESO Very Large Telescope (VLT) consists of four 8.2-m telescopes located at the Paranal Observatory in Chile. Observations were made with the NACO instrument (Lenzen et al. Reference Lenzen, Iye and Moorwood2003; Rousset et al. Reference Rousset, Wizinowich and Bonaccini2003) on the VLT UT1 Antu telescope. The system allows for adaptive-optics and natural seeing imaging over J, H, Ks, L′, and M′ filters, as well as providing Wollaston polarimetry and coronography in L′. The 5σ limiting magnitudes are given as J = 24.05, H = 24.05, Ks = 23.35, L′ = 18.55, and M′ = 15.15 in 1 h. These observations were initially proposed as Director’s Discretionary Time (PI Cooke, Baade) as part of the DWF programme to be made immediately available to the LVC community. However, the observations were finalised and executed by ESO, and made available to the LVC community.

Observations in the L′-band (3.8 μm) were attempted on each night between 2017-08-24 and 2017-09-04. Due to the proximity to the Sun and scheduling constraints, the target was observed during twilight (at UT 22:45–23:20) at airmass 1.5–1.6. Weather and inaccurate pointing during the first nights resulted in the data from the four nights of August 25, 26, 27, and September 1 being analysed. A pixel scale of 27 mas pix−1 was used for a total field of view of 27×27 arcsec. Observations were made in natural seeing mode with integration times 126 × 0.2 s per jitter point (with a 3 arcsec throw per axis), for a total of 15, 19, 14, and 11 min per night. HD 205772 was observed as a flux standard on August 28. The data were reduced by a custom script in a standard way, correcting for sky variance by combining the jittered observations and de-striping by median filtering each detector quadrant separately.

No sources apart from the NGC 4993 nucleus were detected in the field (Figure 5). The detection limits were estimated from the background noise assuming a conservative PSF corresponding to the detected galactic nucleus at approximately 0.5 arcsec FWHM, using a circular aperture of 1 arcsec (40 pix) radius. For the nights of August 25, 26, 27, and September 1, the 5σ detection limits in L′ are 14.5, 14.8, 14.5, and 14.3 mag, respectively, with a combined limit of 15.3 mag.

Figure 5. Stacked NACO image of NGC 4993 (27 arcsec × 27 arcsec), with the location of AT2017gfo marked. The image is oriented with North up and East to the left. The image is the combination of observations taken over four nights and no significant source was found to the detection limits of L′ = 15.3, 5σ.

2.1.7. ESO VLT/VISIR mid-IR

Imaging observations in the mid-IR were also made with the VISIR instrument (Lagage et al. Reference Lagage2004) on the ESO VLT UT3 Melipal telescope. Similar to NACO above, the observations were executed by ESO and made available to the LVC community. VISIR provides an imaging field of view of 38 arcsec × 38 arcsec with a plate scale of 0.045 arcsec per pixel. AT2017gfo was observed on 2017 August 23, 2017 August 31, September 1, 2017, and 2017 September 6, 2017 with the J8.9 filter (central wavelength 8.72μm). Total on-source integration times were 44.8, 17.5, 12.2, and 44.8 min, respectively. Chopping and nodding in perpendicular directions with 8 arcsec amplitudes were used to remove the sky and telescope thermal background. No source was detected to a limiting mag of J8.9 ~7–8 (Table 5). Details of the observations can be found in Kasliwal et al. (Reference Kasliwal2017).

2.2. Optical/near-infrared spectroscopy

Observations of AT2017gfo and the galaxy NGC 4993 were taken in the optical via longslit, fibre, and integral field unit (IFU) spectroscopic modes. Both Australian and Australian partner observational programmes participated in the spectroscopic follow up of AT2017gfo. Details of the instruments and observations are provided below.

2.2.1. ANU2.3/WiFeS

The ANU 2.3-m telescope is located at Siding Spring Observatory in New South Wales, Australia. It includes the dual-beam, image-slicing, integral-field echelle spectrograph (WiFeS, Dopita et al. Reference Dopita, Hart, McGregor, Oates, Bloxham and Jones2007) which can simultaneously observe spectra over a 25 arcsec × 38 arcsec field of view. WiFeS has a spectral range extending from 3 300 to 9 800 Å, which can be observed either in a single exposure with a resolution of R = 3 000, or in two exposures with R = 7 000, depending on the choice of low- or high-resolution grating configurations, respectively. The observations were done using Director’s Discretionary Time.

Spectroscopic observations began on 2017-08-18 at 09:24:25 and 09:40:25 with a wavelength range of 3 200–9 800 Å. Each observation had an exposure time of 15 min. The reduced spectrum shows a blue, featureless continuum peaking near 4 500 Å (Figure 7). The observations continued for two further nights with the same configuration but a larger number of exposures to increase signal for the fading source. The last exposures were taken on 2017-08-21 at times 08:40:58, 09:13, and 09:29 with a wavelength range of 3 200–7 060 Å, again with exposure times of 15 min. A WiFeS collapsed data cube image is shown in Figure 6.

Figure 6. WiFeS IFU collapsed data cube image (cropped to ~25 arcsec × 25 arcsec) of NGC 4993 and AT2017gfo (marked). The image combines the data from both beams taken on 2017-08-18. The transient is noticeably bluer than the host galaxy.

2.2.2. SALT/RSS

Optical spectroscopy of AT2017gfo was obtained using the Robert Stobie Spectrograph (RSS, Burgh et al. Reference Burgh, Nordsieck, Kobulnicky, Williams, O’Donoghue, Smith, Percival, Iye and Moorwood2003) on the 10-m-class Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) located in Sutherland, South Africa. The observations were taken with Director’s Discretionary Time initiated as part of the DWF programme. The RSS is a spectrograph covering the range 3 200–9 000 Å with spectroscopic resolutions of R = 500–10 000. The observations were performed using the PG0300 grating at an angle of 5.75° and the 2 arcsec slit. Data taken on 2017-08-18 at 17:07 and 2017-08-19 at 16:59 (Shara et al. Reference Shara2017) had exposure times of 433 and 716 s, respectively. Due to the visibility limitations of SALT, the data were acquired in early twilight and are heavily contaminated with a high sky background. Spectral flux calibration standards were also observed on the same night.

Basic CCD reductions, cosmic ray cleaning, wavelength calibration, and relative flux calibration were carried out with the PySALT package (Crawford et al. Reference Crawford, Silva, Peck and Soifer2010). Because of the changing pupil during SALT observations, only a relative flux calibration can be achieved. In order to de-blend the sources, the flux from the host galaxy, the atmospheric sky lines, and the GW source were fit simultaneously using the astropy modelling package (Astropy Collaboration et al. 2013). The reduced spectra appears to have a relatively blue, featureless continua as seen in Figure 7. The data are also presented and interpreted in McCully et al. (Reference McCully2017) and Buckley et al. (Reference Buckley2017).

Figure 7. The rapid spectral evolution of AT2017gfo. The ANU 2.3-m WiFeS, SALT RSS (2 spectra), and AAT AAOmega+2dF spectra obtained at 0.93, 1.18, 2.16, and 6.92 d, respectively, after GW detection are shown and labelled. Vertical grey bands denote telluric features that are not well removed in some spectra. Blackbody model fits (red curves) over the full spectra result in temperatures of 6 275 K (WiFeS), 6 475 and 4 700 K (RSS), and 2 080 K (AAOmega). Peaks in the WiFeS, RSS, and AAOmega continua correspond to ~6 400 K, ~5 600 K, ~4 400 K, and <3 200 K, respectively.

2.2.3. AAT/2dF+AAOmega

The Anglo-Australian Telescope (AAT) is a 3.9-m Equatorial-mount optical telescope located in New South Wales, Australia. AAOmega is a dual-beam optical fibre spectrograph with 3 700 to 8 800 Å wavelength coverage and a spectroscopic resolution of R = 1 700 (Smith et al. Reference Smith, Moorwood and Iye2004). We used AAOmega combined with the Two Degree Field (2dF) multi-object system which allows for simultaneous spectroscopic observations of up to 392 objects within a 2° diameter field of view. The observations were done as part of the DWF programme and granted via Director’s Discretionary Time while activating the newly commissioned AAT 2dF Target Of Opportunity (ToO) mode. Fully configuring all 392 fibres takes ~40 min and is too long for rapid follow up of short-lived transient phenomena. In rapid ToO mode, the 2dF software determines, from an existing fibre configuration, which fibres need to move to place a single fibre on the target and one on a guide star. This capability enables configuration and observation within a few minutes and, in the case of AT2017gfo, 5 min between ToO activation and the commencement of the observations.

AT2017gfo observations began on 2017-08-24 at 08:55:07 to 09:41:28 with exposure times of 600 s each (Table 15). The data were processed using the OzDES pipeline (Childress et al. Reference Childress2017). Four exposures were analysed, revealing an E/S0-like galaxy spectrum (Figure 8) with a weak red flux enhancement (Andreoni et al. Reference Andreoni2017b). The source was isolated by subtracting the host galaxy using the SALT host galaxy spectrum (McCully et al. Reference McCully2017) extracted from the region of the galaxy near the source. The SALT spectrum was cleaned over chip gaps and telluric line regions using the average value on either edge of each feature. Finally, the SALT host and AAT AAOmega host+event spectra were scaled and subtracted (Figure 7). Subtracting two spectra with relative flux calibrations introduces uncertainties in the scalar offset. Such subtractions do not significantly affect the form of the residual spectrum, but can provide a small affect on blackbody model fit results. Although care was taken in the subtraction process, the two spectra introduce possible flux calibration differences from the different instruments and extraction techniques. As a result, we stress that the spectrum presented here is meant to be indicative of the behaviour and temperature of the event at 6.92 d, and suffers from the above caveats. A proper host galaxy subtraction with the AAT AAOmega+2dF is planned when NGC 4993 becomes visible.

Figure 8. AAT fibre spectrum of NGC 4993 in a 2-arcsec region at the position of AT2017gfo. A fit to the stellar light (blue) and the stellar light and nebular emission (red) are shown. The fits include the flux of AT2017gfo (at +6.92 d) and the galaxy. Several common atomic transitions are marked and a zoom-in of the Hα region is shown. The spectrum is corrected for line-of-sight Milky Way extinction.

2.3. Radio

Five Australian and international radio facilities participated in this follow-up campaign. In this section we describe the role of each radio observatory that performed the follow up of GW170817 and/or AT2017gfo under Australian-led observing programs.

2.3.1. ATCA

The Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) is located at the Paul Wild Observatory in New South Wales, Australia. It is an array of six 22-m radio antennas, which can be configured with antenna spacings up to 6 km. The array can observe in one of five observing bands spread between 1.1 and 105 GHz.

We carried out ATCA observations on August 18, 21, 28, and September 5, 2017 under a ToO programme (CX391; PI: T. Murphy). During the August observations, we targeted 53 galaxies identified to be located within the 90% containment volume of GW170817 (Bannister et al. Reference Bannister2017b, Reference Bannister2017c). The September 5 observation targeted only the optical counterpart, AT2017gfo and its host galaxy NGC 4993. Table 8 presents a summary of the observations.

The August observations used two 2 GHz frequency bands with central frequencies of 8.5 and 10.5 GHz and observed NGC 4993 using two frequency bands centred on 16 and 21 GHz on August 18, For the September observations, we centred these two frequency bands on 5.5 and 9.0 GHz. The configuration of the ATCA changed over the course of the observations, with ATCA in the EW352 configuration for the August 18 observation and in the 1.5 A configuration for all other observations.

For all epochs and all frequencies, the flux scale was determined using the ATCA primary calibrator PKS B1934-638. The bandpass response at 8.5 and 10.5 GHz was determined using PKS B1934-638 and observations of QSO B1245-197 were used to calibrate the complex gains. We used QSO B1921-293 to solve for the bandpass at 16.7 and 21.2 GHz and observations of QSO B1256-220 were used to solve for the complex gains at these frequencies. All of the visibility data were reduced using the standard routines in the miriad environment (Sault et al. Reference Sault, Teuben, Wright, Shaw, Payne and Hayes1995).

We used the miriad tasks invert, clean, and restor to invert and clean the calibrated visibility data from the August observations of the 53 targeted galaxies. We fit a single Gaussian to each of the 53 galaxies detected in our August observing epochs (Lynch et al. LVC GCN 21628, Lynch et al. LVC GCN 21629). Comparing these observations, we find no transient emission above a 3σ limit between 36 and 640 μJy. The measured flux densities for host galaxy NGC 4993 are listed in Table 9. The results from our observations of AT2017gfo are described in Hallinan et al. (Reference Hallinan2017), including a detection on September 5 at 7.25 GHz, with measured flux density of 25±6 μJy (Murphy et al. Reference Murphy2017).

2.3.2. ASKAP

The Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) is a system of 36 12-m phased-array feed receiver radio telescopes located in Western Australia. The instrument covers a frequency range of 0.7 to 1.8 GHz with a bandwidth of 300 MHz. The field of view of is 30 deg2 at 1.4 GHz, with a resolution of ~30 arcsec.

ASKAP performed imaging observations on 2017-08-19 05:34:32 (LVC GCN 21513) with 12 of the 36 antennasFootnote 5 . The 90% LVC contour region (The LIGO Scientific Collaboration and the Virgo Collaboration 2017d) was covered with three pointings using an automated algorithm (Dobie et al. in preparation) observed over the following 4 d. We place an upper limit of ~1 mJy on emission from AT2017gfo and its host galaxy NGC4993.

At the time of publication, 14 further single-beam observations of the AT2017gfo location were carried out with varying numbers of beams and antennas at different frequencies and bandwidths (subject to commissioning constraints). These observations are undergoing processing, while further observations are ongoing.

ASKAP also searched the 90% LVC uncertainty region at high-time resolution for fast radio bursts (FRBs Lorimer et al. Reference Lorimer, Bailes, McLaughlin, Narkevic and Crawford2007) using the search algorithms described in Section 2.3.5 to cover a dispersion measure range of 0–2 000 pc cm−3. The observations were in “fly’s-eye” mode with seven antennas at a central frequency of 1 320 MHz (Bannister et al. Reference Bannister2017a). Observation times were 2017-08-18 04:05, 2017-08-18 08:57, and 2017-08-19 02:08, for a total duration of 3.6, 4.1, and 11.0 h, respectively. Above a flux density threshold of ~40 Jy/ $\sqrt{w}$ , there were no FRB detections (GCN21671), where w is the observed width of the FRB in milliseconds.

2.3.3. MWA

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is a system of 2048 dual-polarisation dipole antennas organised into 128 tiles of 4×4 antennas located in Western Australia. MWA operates between 80 and 300 MHz (Tingay et al. Reference Tingay2013) and has a resolution of several arcmin. Operations with the original array (baselines up to 3 km) with a compact configuration with maximum redundancy ceased in 2016. The reduced baseline was used until mid-2017 at which point tiles with extended baselines up to 5 km were installed for MWA Phase II.

The telescope responded automatically to the LVC GCN (Kaplan et al. Reference Kaplan2015) but the initial LVC notice only included information from a single detector of LIGO, so the telescope pointing was not useful. Later, we manually pointed the telescope and began observations on 2017-08-18 at 07:07 with only 40 tiles in a hybrid array with elements of the maximally redundant array and the original array. Observations occurred daily from 2017-08-18 to 2017-08-22 with 75 × 2min exposures and then continued weekly. The observations cover a 400 deg2 field of view at a central frequency of 185 MHz and a bandwidth of 30 MHz (Kaplan et al. Reference Kaplan2017b). We see no emission at the position of NGC 4993 with a flux density limit of 51 mJy beam−1 (3σ confidence) from the data taken on 2017 August 18 (Kaplan et al. Reference Kaplan2017c). Later, observations with more functioning tiles and longer baselines should have considerably improved performance. Kaplan et al. (Reference Kaplan, Murphy, Rowlinson, Croft, Wayth and Trott2016) discuss in detail the strategies to use MWA for finding prompt radio counterparts to GW events.

2.3.4. VLBA

The Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) is a radio interferometer consisting of 10 25-m radio telescopes spread across the United States, and is capable of observing in one of 10 bands at frequencies between 1.2 and 96 GHz.

The counterpart AT2017gfo and its host galaxy NGC 4993 were observed on three occasions under the Director’s Discretionary Time project BD218, each with 6.5 h duration. The observations were performed from 2017-08-18 19:58 to 2017-08-19 01:34, 2017-08-20 18:31 to 2017-08-21 01:13, and 017-08-21 18:26 to 2017-08-22 01:09. The central observing frequency was 8.7 GHz, with a bandwidth of 256 MHz and dual polarisation. The source VCS1 J1258-2219, with a position uncertainty of 0.2 mas, was used as a primary phase reference calibrator, with NVSS J131248-235046 as a secondary calibrator. An observing failure rendered the first epoch unusable, but the second and third epochs provided good data.

No source was detected within 0.5 arcsec of the position of AT2017gfo, consistent with the findings of both the VLA and ATCA instruments (e.g., Bannister et al. Reference Bannister2017c; Kaplan et al. Reference Kaplan2017a; Lynch et al. Reference Lynch2017). However, we are able to provide 5.5σ upper limits of 125 and 120 μJy beam−1 at 2017 August 20 21:36 and 2017 August 21 21:36, respectively, while stacking the two images produces an upper limit of 88 μJy beam−1 (Deller et al. Reference Deller2017a, Reference Deller2017b).

Imaging the core region of NGC 4993 identifies a sub-mJy radio source at the centre with coordinates RA = 13h09m47.69398s Dec = –23°23′02.3195″ (J2000). The detection is consistent with either an unresolved source or a marginally resolved source on a scale smaller than the VLBA synthesised beam (2.5×1.0 mas). The systematic uncertainties of our position are ⩽1 mas in both RA and DEC. We find a 9σ flux density of 0.22 mJy, and the a priori amplitude calibration available to the VLBA is accurate to the 20% level. If we assume the synthesised beam size of 2.5×1.0 mas to represent a conservative upper limit on the size of the source, we infer a lower limit for the brightness temperature of 1.6 × 106 K. An initial interpretation suggests the recovered brightness temperature is consistent with an AGN (Deller et al. Reference Deller2017c). Comparison of the flux densities estimated by ATCA and VLA (see Table 9 and Hallinan et al. Reference Hallinan2017) to the VLBA value indicates that a considerable amount (~50%) of the total source flux is contained within this mass scale component.

2.3.5. Parkes

The Parkes Radio Telescope (Parkes) is a 64-m telescope located in Parkes, New South Wales, Australia. Parkes operated in FRB search mode with the Multibeam receiver (Staveley-Smith et al. Reference Staveley-Smith1996) and the BPSR backend (Keith et al. Reference Keith2010). The usable bandwidth is 340 MHz, in the range of 1182–1582 MHz. If the neutron star merger produced a massive (>2 M) neutron star instead of a black hole, it would be expected to possess a spin period close to the break-up velocity of ~1 ms and potentially a large magnetic field generated during its formation. Such objects (millisecond magnetars) are a potential source of FRBs or possibly even repeating FRBs (Spitler et al. Reference Spitler2016; Metzger, Berger, & Margalit Reference Metzger, Berger and Margalit2017). The FRB should be detectable at S/N > 100 with Parkes at the distance of NGC 4993, if appropriately beamed and not hidden by the ejecta from the merger.

A dedicated search for FRBs (Keane et al. Reference Keane2018) with dispersion measures ranging from 0–2 000 pc cm−3 associated with AT2017gfo was performed on 2017-08-18 at 06:49:31 and 08:50:36 with 2-h and 1-h integration times, respectively, and again on 2017-08-20 at 01:44:32 and 02:50:14 with 1-h integration times (Bailes et al. Reference Bailes2017a, Reference Bailes2017b). No FRBs were detected with a 7σ limiting flux density of 1.4 sqrt(w/0.064) Jy sqrt(ms), where w is the observed pulse width of the FRB in ms.

3 ANALYSIS

The observations presented here identified the optical transient on multiple epochs for the first ~7 d after the LIGO trigger, starting from about 21 h after the event. In Figure 4, we present the multi-band photometric light curve of AT2017gfo, observed in g-band (SkyMapper), r-band (SkyMapper, Zadko, Etelman/VIRT), and i-band (AST3-2, SkyMapper). The multi-band measurements indicate a decay faster in g-band than in the r- and i-bands. We processed and analysed four optical spectra acquired with ANU2.3m/WiFeS, SALT/RSS, AAT/2dF+AAOmega. The subtraction of the host galaxy allows the signature of the transient to be identified and the spectral evolution to be assessed (Figure 7). In this section, we review the spectral evolution of AT2017gfo, describe the properties of the host galaxy NGC 4993, and assess the photometric evolution of the event compared to sGRB and kilonova models.

3.1. Spectral evolution of AT2017gfo

The ANU 2.3m (WiFeS), SALT (RSS), and AAT (AAOmega+2dF) spectra reveal a rapid evolution of the transient over ~7 d while maintaining relatively featureless continua. As a coarse measure of the evolving spectral energy distribution, we fit a blackbody model to the spectra (Figure 7). Continuum blackbody temperatures were calculated by fitting the observed spectra using the python scipy package implementation of the non-linear least-squares Levenberg–Marquadt algorithm. Spectra are corrected to rest-frame and for Milky Way line-of-sight extinction using the Cardelli, Clayton, & Mathis (Reference Cardelli, Clayton and Mathis1989) prescription and adopting R V = 3.1 and E(BV) = 0.12 and based on the dust maps of Schlegel, Finkbeiner, & Davis (Reference Schlegel, Finkbeiner and Davis1998).

The model fits result in a temperature evolution from ~6 400 K to ~2 100 K in ~7 d. The WiFeS spectrum is reasonably well fit by a ~6 300 K blackbody, with the peak in the spectrum continuum corresponding to ~6 400 K. The curvature of the SALT spectrum is not well fit by a blackbody model, with the model fit producing a temperature of ~6 500 K, whereas the peak in the spectrum roughly corresponds to ~5 600 K. The second SALT spectrum, taken at +2.16 d, is reasonably well fit, producing a blackbody model fit of ~4700 K, while the continuum peak corresponds to roughly 4 400 K. By day ~7, the source is quite faint and host galaxy subtraction is less reliable. The AAOmega+2dF spectrum at +6.92 d is best fit by a blackbody model at ~2 080 K, but has the caveats stated in Section 2.2.3.

3.2. The host galaxy

The AAT/2dF+AAOmega spectrum (Figure 8, Andreoni et al. Reference Andreoni2017b) was acquired 6.92 d after the LIGO trigger. The fibre was centred on the transient position, but the spectrum is dominated by the light of the host galaxy. Figure 7 shows the galaxy-subtracted transient spectrum from the same observation.

We use pPXF (Cappellari Reference Cappellari2017) to fit the spectrum to 7 300 Å (the extent of the MILES spectral template library) to estimate the metallicity, age, r-band mass-to-light ratio, and velocity dispersion of stars in the region immediately surrounding AT2017gfo. At the redshift of the host galaxy, the 2-arcsec diameter of a 2dF fibre corresponds to a linear size of 400 parsec. Assuming a spectral resolution of 4.5 Å (measured using night sky lines), the pPXF fit yields a velocity dispersion of 100 km s−1, a stellar age of 10 billion yrs, a metallicity of [M/H] = −0.2, and an r-band mass-to-light ratio of 4. Evidence for Hα emission in the pPXF fit is very weak, measured at EW = −0.2 Å, but is consistent with zero. The environment in the location of the transient is consistent with an old, passively evolving stellar population with no ongoing star formation.

The above assessment of NGC 4993 in the region of the source is consistent with the report of Sadler et al. (Reference Sadler2017) for the central 6-arcsec region of the galaxy based on spectroscopy from the 6dFGS (Jones et al. Reference Jones2009). The central stellar velocity dispersion of 163 km s−1 (Ogando et al. Reference Ogando, Maia, Pellegrini and da Costa2008) predicts a central black hole mass of M BH = 107.7 M (Yu et al. Reference Yu2017), which can be compared against estimates based on the radio properties of the central source. The compact radio emission detected by VLBA in the central region of NGC 4993 with a brightness temperature exceeding 106 K indicates the presence of a low-luminosity active galactic nucleus (LLAGN), allowing us to estimate the black hole mass using the fundamental plane of black hole activity (e.g. Plotkin et al. Reference Plotkin, Markoff, Kelly, Körding and Anderson2012; Merloni, Heinz, & di Matteo Reference Merloni, Heinz and di Matteo2003; Falcke, Körding, & Markoff Reference Falcke, Körding and Markoff2004). The VLBA flux density was measured to be 0.22 ± 0.04 mJy at 8.7 GHz, which (assuming a flat spectral index) gives a 5-GHz radio luminosity of (2.1 ± 0.04) × 1036 erg s−1, while the X-ray luminosity as measured by SWIFT is 5.6+2.4 −1.9 × 1039 erg s−1 (Evans et al. Reference Evans2017). The radio spectral index is consistent with being flat or slightly negative (as can be seen from the ATCA results shown in Table 9); the results are insensitive to small variations in this parameter. Using the relationship described in Plotkin et al. (Reference Plotkin, Markoff, Kelly, Körding and Anderson2012), we obtain a predicted central black hole mass of 107.8 ± 0.3 M, in good agreement with the velocity dispersion estimate.

Sadler et al. (Reference Sadler2017) also state that the nuclear dust lanes evident in the HST ACS images (Foley et al. Reference Foley2017; Pan et al. Reference Pan2017) may be the product of a galaxy–galaxy merger that occurred as long as several Gyr ago. We note that a wet galaxy merger (to produce the visible dust) implies that the binary progenitor of AT2017gfo might have originated in the merging galaxy and not necessarily in the main early-type host. Such an origin could permit a shorter BNS inspiral time than would be plausible for a massive galaxy with no recent star formation. Previous sGRB hosts with possible kilonovae are often low-mass, blue star-forming galaxies (Tanvir et al. Reference Tanvir, Levan, Fruchter, Hjorth, Hounsell, Wiersema and Tunnicliffe2013; Fong & Berger Reference Fong and Berger2013), though 20–40% of sGRBs occur in early-type galaxies (Fong et al. Reference Fong2013). The diversity of possible host galaxies for neutron star merger events therefore needs to be kept in mind when searching for the counterparts of future GW events.

3.3. Comparison with GRB afterglow and kilonova models

The optical data we acquired, alone, can give insight on the nature of the transient event. First, we explore the GRB afterglow scenario in order to test the possibility that AT2017gfo behaves as a ‘standard’ on-axis GRB in the optical, specifically using the Granot, Piran, & Sari (Reference Granot, Piran and Sari1999) and Granot & Sari (Reference Granot and Sari2002) models. Second, we investigate the kilonova scenario by comparing the data we acquired with three possible models (Tanaka & Hotokezaka Reference Tanaka and Hotokezaka2013; Hotokezaka et al. Reference Hotokezaka, Kyutoku, Tanaka, Kiuchi, Sekiguchi, Shibata and Wanajo2013; Barnes & Kasen Reference Barnes and Kasen2013; Metzger et al. Reference Metzger, Bauswein, Goriely and Kasen2015). In Figure 9, we overlay the results we obtain to our data.

Figure 9. Comparison of models to optical photometry with Zadko (squares, r-band), AST3-2 (diamonds, i-band), Etelman/VIRT (triangles, C-filter presented in the central panel), and SkyMapper (circles, gri-bands). The solid black line is the GS02 model of a short GRB afterglow. The dark orange region represents the kilonova model by Tanaka & Hotokezaka (Reference Tanaka and Hotokezaka2013). The solid red line represents the Barnes & Kasen (Reference Barnes and Kasen2013) model for 56Ni+r-process opacities. The blue lines represent the free neutron-powered blue precursor (solid: v ej = 0.2c, M ej = 0.01M; dashed: v ej = 0.2c, M ej = 0.1M Metzger et al. Reference Metzger, Bauswein, Goriely and Kasen2015), while the black dashed and dot–dashed lines represent the Metzger et al. (Reference Metzger, Bauswein, Goriely and Kasen2015) and Barnes & Kasen (Reference Barnes and Kasen2013) models together. The figure is organised in three panels, presenting photometry and overlaid models in g-band (top), r-band (centre), and i-band (bottom).

3.3.1. GRB afterglow

We investigate the GRB afterglow scenario using the Granot and Sari (Granot et al. Reference Granot, Piran and Sari1999; Granot & Sari Reference Granot and Sari2002, G02) formulation for a relativistic blast wave in an ISM environment. Far from the sites of the break frequencies of the GS02 spectra, each power-law segment becomes asymptotic. In particular, we can assume that the frequency of our optical observations, νopt, relates to other characteristic frequencies as νsa < ν m < νopt < ν c , where νsa is the self-absorption frequency, ν m is the minimal electron synchrotron (or peak) frequency, and ν c is the frequency at which an electron cools over the dynamical time span of the system. In this region of the spectrum, we can approximate the spectral flux density as F νt α. Simultaneous X-ray or radio measurements would help to constrain the locations of the break frequencies of the spectrum.

We calculate the index α by χ2 minimisation of the Zadko telescope r-band data points and we find α = −1.73 ± 0.10; in addition, we derive an electron power-law index $p = 1+\frac{4}{3}\alpha$ (G02) to determine p = 3.31 ± 0.13. This value is higher than historical sGRBS (see Fong et al. Reference Fong, Berger, Margutti and Zauderer2015, for a decadal review), where the median value of p is found to be ⟨p⟩ = 2.43+0.36 −0.28. In a classical sGRB scenario, our calculated p could be interpreted as (i) emission is not a spherically isotropic blast wave (Sari, Piran, & Halpern Reference Sari, Piran and Halpern1999) giving a larger temporal decay slope than historical sGRBs (Fong et al. Reference Fong, Berger, Margutti and Zauderer2015) or (ii) evidence that the jet itself may be structured (Rossi, Lazzati, & Rees Reference Rossi, Lazzati and Rees2002; Granot & Kumar Reference Granot and Kumar2003).

We use the isotropic gamma-ray energy measured with FermiE γ, iso〉 ≈ (5.35 ± 1.26) × 1046 erg (Goldstein et al. Reference Goldstein2017a) to constrain our parameter space, assuming that E γ, isoE K, iso (Frail et al. Reference Frail2001). In this way, we find an unphysically high circumburst number density (in the order of n ~ 1013 cm−3). In addition, placing such high values for the circumburst number density back into the GS02 models, we come across results that contradict our assumption that νsa < ν m < νopt < ν c , i.e. that ν c < νopt. Contradictory results are also obtained considering any other assumption for the relation between the spectral breaks and for any spectra given in Granot & Sari (Reference Granot and Sari2002). Therefore, we rule out the optical emission being the afterglow of a ‘standard’ on-axis sGRB. This conclusion is supported by the lack of any prompt X-ray afterglow detection (Cenko et al. Reference Cenko2017), which usually follow on-axis-GRB discoveries.

3.3.2. Kilonova models

We compare our data with three standard models describing inherent kilonova emission. In particular, we consider the case of r-processes in the ejecta from BNS mergers in the ‘TH13’ formulation (Tanaka & Hotokezaka Reference Tanaka and Hotokezaka2013; Hotokezaka et al. Reference Hotokezaka, Kyutoku, Tanaka, Kiuchi, Sekiguchi, Shibata and Wanajo2013) for a range of NS equations of state, the ‘B&K13’ model (Barnes & Kasen Reference Barnes and Kasen2013), and free neutron-powered blue precursor to the kilonova emission (‘M15’, Metzger et al. Reference Metzger, Bauswein, Goriely and Kasen2015). We plot the expected gri-bands light curves for all these models in Figure 9.

TH13 model: We calculate the expected light curves using the TH13 kilonova gri-bands light curves for a source located at D L =40 Mpc and for a variety of NS equations of state, specifically APR4-1215, H4-1215, Sly-135, APR4-1314, and H4-1314. We calculate the light curves for polar view angles, where the magnitudes are K-corrected in the rest frame using a standard ΛCDM cosmology with H 0 = 70 km s−1 Mpc−1, Ωm = 0.3, and $\Omega _\Lambda = 0.7$ (Hotokezaka et al. Reference Hotokezaka, Kyutoku, Tanaka, Kiuchi, Sekiguchi, Shibata and Wanajo2013). The results lie within the solid orange regions in Figure 9 and show a fainter emission than we observed. The results are to be expected, as the spectra (Figure 7) are characteristic of a blue transient—at least in the first few days after the merger—while the TH13 model predicts a transient peaking at near-IR wavelengths. The ‘mismatch’ between our measurements and the TH13 models reduces at late times and at redder bands (from g to i), but only a longer monitoring of the source could indicate whether the transient can be dominated by r-processes at late times.

BK13 model: In the BK13 model, the ejecta have an opacity similar to r-process material, made up of heavier lanthanide-group elements generated from dynamical ejection, and material made up of 56Ni that is ejected via disk winds. These cases predict an emission peaking in the near-IR and optical, respectively (Barnes & Kasen Reference Barnes and Kasen2013). We show the results for the emission expected from 56Ni in Figure 9 as a dashed grey line. At late times (t ≈ 6 days), we find an upper limit magnitude consistent with this model.

M15 precursor model: The photometry and spectroscopy acquired here show a high optical luminosity and hot, blue continua during the first ~1 d (see Section 3.1). Therefore, we explore the M15 model that predicts an energetic blue precursor. This model is based on the idea that a small fraction (i.e. M n ~ 10−4M; Metzger Reference Metzger2017) of the ejected mass in the outer shell is rapidly expanded after shock heating during the merger. Thus, the neutrons in the outer shell avoid capture by the nuclei in the dense inner ejecta during the r-process. The unbound neutrons are then subject to β-decay, which gives rise to a precursor to the kilonova which, at the distance to AT2017gfo, would peak at mag r ~ 17.5 after a few hours, and consistent with the photometry. The peak luminosity of the neutron layer can be approximated by $L_{\mathrm{peak}} \propto v_{\text{ej}} \times M_{\text{ej}}^{1/3}$ (Metzger Reference Metzger2017) We overlay the gri-bands plots to our data in Figure 9 for lanthanide-free ejecta and for two sets of values for the velocity and mass of the ejecta (v ej = 0.2c, M ej = 0.01M; and v ej = 0.2c, M ej = 0.1M).

The M15 model seems to match our observations with a greater accuracy than the TH13 and BK13 models in the first ~2 d after the merger. However, this model alone predicts a steeper decay of the light curve than the observations. The SkyMapper g-band upper limits place a mild constraint in favour of a scenario with only an M13-type precursor. Nevertheless, the combination of the M15 and BK13 models, represented with black dashed lines in Figure 9, is a better match to our data and, particularly, for the r-band measurements shown in the central panel.

4 DISCUSSION

The first detection of the EM counterpart to a GW event is a milestone in the history of modern astronomy. Australian teams contributed to both the search and the follow up of the transient AT2017gfo, the EM counterpart to GW170817. In this paper, we present the observations, follow-up strategies, and data acquired by 14 radio, infrared, and optical facilities led by Australian observing programmes.

It is interesting to discuss the progenitor of this event. Our own galaxy contains at least seven BNS pairs that will coalesce in less than a Hubble time, see Özel & Freire (Reference Özel and Freire2016). For some, like the double pulsar PSR J0737-3039A/B (Burgay et al. Reference Burgay2003), the ‘remaining time’ before merger is short (~80 Myr), whereas for others, like PSR B1534+12 the (remaining) coalescence time is 2.7 Gyr (Arzoumanian, Cordes, & Wasserman Reference Arzoumanian, Cordes and Wasserman1999). The latter would appear to be a more likely progenitor for this event as it could have formed when the last episode of star formation in NGC 4993 was still underway. It will be fascinating to see how many binary star mergers are ultimately observed in active star-forming galaxies from ‘ultra-relativistic’ progenitors with short lifetimes compared to those from wider systems like PSR B1534+12.

The location in NGC 4993 is also of some interest. At 40 Mpc, the projected distance of AT2017gfo from the centre is 2.2 kpc. Such a displacement could be achieved during a galaxy merger, so constraints on any kick received by the binary are poor.

No radio source is detected down to 40 μJy with the ATCA, ASKAP, VLBA, and MWA telescopes within 10 d from the GW detection. However, past sGRBs that were detected in the radio despite being 30–60 times more distant than this event (Berger et al. Reference Berger2005; Soderberg et al. Reference Soderberg2006; Fong et al. Reference Fong2014; Zhang et al. Reference Zhang, Jin, Wang and Wei2017) imply that future neutron star mergers at these (40 Mpc) distances could reach flux densities of 0.1 to 1 Jy. The Parkes and ASKAP radio telescopes searched for FRBs in NGC 4993 after the BNS merger for a total of 5 and 18.7 h, respectively. No FRB was detected: a signal from a source at ~40 Mpc with similar properties of the repeating FRB 121102 (Spitler et al. Reference Spitler2016) would have resulted in a highly significant detection.

We compared ‘standard’ sGRB afterglow models (GS02) with the optical light curve obtained with the measurements of the Zadko, AST3-2, SkyMapper, and Etelman/VIRT telescopes. The AT2017gfo transient was proven to be the EM counterpart to GW170817 and GRB 170817A (Lipunov et al. Reference Lipunov2017b), but its optical light curve does not match the sGRB afterglow models. The continuum profiles and evolution of the spectra of AT2017gfo are unlike sGRBs and argue for a kilonova-like explosion, with a blackbody-like event cooling rapidly over the ~7 d of our spectral coverage. No features are identifiable in the optical spectra acquired in the first week after the trigger, which prevents us from performing velocity measurements. We cannot rule out that the emission is collisionally dominated. Tidally energised winds may have existed just prior to the merger, however the lack of any strong X-ray emission and the exotic composition required for such winds make this scenario unlikely. We compared three kilonova models (T&H13, B&K13, and M15) with our photometric data and the plots, combined with the spectral evolution of the transient, make the combination of a neutron-powered blue precursor and a r-process red emission at later time a plausible scenario.

5 FUTURE PERSPECTIVES

Several facilities discussed here have existing reactive programmes to follow-up GW alerts, while others perform observations as part of DWF and/or OzGrav.

DWF coordinates ~30 major observatories worldwide and in space to provide simultaneous, fast-cadenced, deep (m ~ 23–25, optical), radio to gamma-ray coverage of fast transients and GW eventsFootnote 6 (Cooke et al. in preparation). As a result, DWF is on-source before, during, and after fast transients and has been in full operation since 2016. Moreover, DWF performs real-time (seconds) supercomputing data analysis and transient identification (Andreoni et al. Reference Andreoni, Jacobs, Hegarty, Pritchard, Cooke and Ryder2017a; Vohl et al. Reference Vohl, Pritchard, Andreoni, Cooke and Meade2017; Meade et al. Reference Meade2017) and triggers rapid-response, conventional ToO, and long-term spectroscopy and imaging with our network of 1–10-m class telescopes. DWF operates several weeks a year and was not on sky during this GW event. However, 10 DWF participating facilities provided data for AT2017gfo. GW event detections during future DWF observing runs will provide complete, densely sampled, multi-wavelength imaging, and spectroscopy of the event and host galaxy.

The intent of the EM component of OzGrav is to help oversee a number of collaborating facilities, including the DWF programme, in an effort to optimise the follow up of GW events by Australian and Australian-led programs at all wavelengths. By the time of LIGO/Virgo ‘O3’ run, OzGrav will be fully optimised to provide complete and dense coverage of GW events at all wavelengths via imaging, spectroscopy, interferometry, and FRB searches.

The DFN is being augmented with cameras designed to detect bright optical transients. The first such station consists of a Nikon D810 Camera with a Samyang 14 mm f/2.8 IF ED UMC Lens, giving a field of view of 80 × 100°, an imaging cadence of 15 s, and a limiting magnitude of mag v = 10. Successor astronomy stations have been developed to have a greater sky coverage and increased sensitivity, via multiple cameras to tile the sky with a <5 s imaging cadence and limiting magnitude of ag v = 12. The current and future DFN network is the only facility that can provide continuous monitoring for half of the Southern sky.

The future of the OzGrav facilities network also includes the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTOFootnote 7 ), a planned wide-field robotic optical telescope optimised for following up LVC triggers. GOTO is supported by a collaboration between Monash University; Warwick, Sheffield, Leicester, and Armagh University in the UK; and the National Astronomical Research Institute of Thailand (NARIT). Each instrument consists of eight 40-cm astrographs on a single mount, with fields of view arranged to achieve a total coverage of order 40 deg2. The prototype instrument, with four astrographs, was deployed in 2017 June, although full robotic operation was not achieved before the end of O2. Funding has now been secured for an additional four astrographs, and the instrument is expected to commence operations in 2018.

Australia will further be able to support the search for and characterisation of GW sources with GLUV, a 30-cm ultraviolet survey telescope under development at ANU (Sharp et al. Reference Sharp, Tucker, Ridden-Harper, Bloxham, Petkovic, Evans, Simard and Takami2016) for a high altitude balloon platform. It will feature a 7 deg2 field of view and a limiting magnitude in near-UV of ~22. Ridden-Harper et al. (Reference Ridden-Harper, Tucker, Sharp, Gilbert and Petkovic2017) explores the application of GLUV to GW source characterisation, showing that early UV observations could provide a powerful diagnostic to identify merger pathways. The system is expected to fly in 2019 and build towards a constellation of telescopes flying in observation campaigns.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Prof. Brian Metzger who provided the gri light curves for the M15 model. Part of this research was funded by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Gravitational Wave Discovery (OzGrav), CE170100004 and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics (CAASTRO), CE110001020. Parts of this research were conducted by the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for All-sky Astrophysics in 3 Dimensions (ASTRO-3D), CE170100013.

Research support to IA is provided by the Australian Astronomical Observatory (AAO). JC acknowledges the Australian Research Council Future Fellowship grant FT130101219. The Etelman Observatory team acknowledges support through NASA grants NNX13AD28A and NNX15AP95A. TM acknowledges the support of the Australian Research Council through grant FT150100099. SO acknowledges the Australian Research Council grant Laureate Fellowship FL15010014. DLK and ISB are additionally supported by NSF grant AST-141242.1 PAB and the DFN team acknowledge the Australian Research Council for support under their Australian Laureate Fellowship scheme. C.M. is supported by NSF grant AST-1313484.

The ATCA is part of the Australia Telescope National Facility which is funded by the Australian Government for operation as a National Facility managed by CSIRO.

This scientific work makes use of the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory, operated by CSIRO. We acknowledge the Wajarri Yamatji people as the traditional owners of the Observatory site. Support for the operation of the MWA is provided by the Australian Government (NCRIS), under a contract to Curtin University administered by Astronomy Australia Limited. We acknowledge the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre which is supported by the Western Australian and Australian Governments.

The Australian SKA Pathfinder is part of the Australia Telescope National Facility which is managed by CSIRO. Operation of ASKAP is funded by the Australian Government with support from the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy. ASKAP uses the resources of the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre. Establishment of ASKAP, the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory and the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre are initiatives of the Australian Government, with support from the Government of Western Australia and the Science and Industry Endowment Fund. We acknowledge the Wajarri Yamatji people as the traditional owners of the Observatory site. This work was supported by resources provided by the Pawsey Supercomputing Centre with funding from the Australian Government and the Government of Western Australia.

The Long Baseline Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc.

The Zadko Telescope is supported by the University of Western Australia Department of Physics, in the Faculty of Engineering and Mathematical Sciences. We also thank the superb technical support from J. Moore and A. Burrel that has enabled the facility to participate in this project.

SkyMapper is owned and operated by The Australian National University’s Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics. The national facility capability for SkyMapper has been funded through ARC LIEF grant LE130100104 from the Australian Research Council, awarded to the University of Sydney, the ANU, Swinburne University of Technology, the University of Queensland, the University of Western Australia, the University of Melbourne, Curtin University of Technology, Monash University and the Australian Astronomical Observatory.

The AST3 project is supported by the National Basic Research Program (973 Program) of China (Grant No. 2013CB834900), and the Chinese Polar Environment Comprehensive Investigation & Assessment Program (Grand No. CHINARE2016-02-03-05). The construction of the AST3 telescopes has received fundings from Tsinghua University, Nanjing University, Beijing Normal University, University of New South Wales, Texas A&M University, the Australian Antarctic Division, and the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS) of Australia. It has also received fundings from Chinese Academy of Sciences through the Center for Astronomical Mega-Science and National Astronomical Observatory of China (NAOC).

Based in part on data acquired through the Australian Astronomical Observatory. We acknowledge the traditional owners of the land on which the AAT stands, the Gamilaraay people, and pay our respects to elders past and present.

Some of the observations reported in this paper were obtained with the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT) under the Director’s Discretionary Time programme 2017-1-DDT-009. The SALT/SAAO team are supported by the National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa.

Research partially based on observations collected at the European Organisation for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere under ESO programme 60.A-9392.

Footnotes

1 All dates in this paper are UT, unless a different time reference is explicitly specified.

5 As a result of ongoing commissioning.

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Observation timeline for the facilities presented in this paper showing the time of observation offset from the GW event and the nominal length of the reported observations. Spectroscopic observations are shown in green, radio observations in orange, and optical and mid-infrared are in blue.

Figure 1

Table 1. Facilities participating in the follow-up observations summarised in this paper. Principal references for the relevant data from each facility are indicated in the right-most column. We specify under which programme the observations were taken when multiple groups used the same telescope to follow up GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 2

Table 2. AST3-2 observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 3

Table 3. Zadko observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 4

Table 4. Etelman/VIRT observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 5

Table 5. ESO VLT observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo (Kasliwal et al. in preparation).

Figure 6

Table 6. SkyMapper Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo with photometric measurements. The SkyMapper follow up is not limited to the data points presented in this table. The results from the analysis of the complete dataset will be discussed in future publications.

Figure 7

Table 7. ASKAP Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 8

Table 8. ATCA Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 9

Table 9. ATCA measured flux densities for NGC 4993.

Figure 10

Table 10. MWA Observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 11

Table 11. Parkes observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo searching for FRBs.

Figure 12

Table 12. VLBA observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 13

Table 13. ANU2.3/WiFeS observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 14

Table 14. SALT/RSS observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 15

Table 15. AAT/AAOmega+2dF observations of GW170817 and AT2017gfo.

Figure 16

Figure 2. Footprints of SkyMapper observations in two different follow-up modes: one using the blind search of new transient sources where fields overlap with GW localisation map (grey squares) and the other using the targeted observation of the optical counterpart, AT2017gfo, discovered by other EM follow-up groups (yellow square). The positions of AT2017gfo and its host galaxy (NGC 4993) are indicated on the figure. The red dots are target galaxies from the 6dFGS catalogue that were prioritised by their position and spectroscopic redshift.

Figure 17

Figure 3. SkyMapper optical images of NGC 4993 (left centre) ~26 d before and ~1 d after the detection of AT2017gfo. The images are oriented with North up and East to the left and are cropped to 2 arcmin on a side, with the position of AT2017gfo marked. The image taken on 2017 July 22 is in i-band, the image taken on 2017 August 18 (where the transient is visible) is in r-band.

Figure 18

Figure 4. Optical light curve of AT2017gfo for the first week after the GW detection obtained with the AST3-2, SkyMapper (SM), Zadko, and Etelman/VIRT telescopes. Down arrows indicate upper limits. Note that the evolution at bluer bands is faster than the evolution at redder bands. Dashed vertical lines indicate epochs when spectroscopy was acquired. Spectra analysed in this work and presented in Figures 7 and 8 are indicated in black, whereas spectra marked in grey were obtained but are to be published at a later time, as they were acquired in a different mode than the first and require a different analysis.

Figure 19

Figure 5. Stacked NACO image of NGC 4993 (27 arcsec × 27 arcsec), with the location of AT2017gfo marked. The image is oriented with North up and East to the left. The image is the combination of observations taken over four nights and no significant source was found to the detection limits of L′ = 15.3, 5σ.

Figure 20

Figure 6. WiFeS IFU collapsed data cube image (cropped to ~25 arcsec × 25 arcsec) of NGC 4993 and AT2017gfo (marked). The image combines the data from both beams taken on 2017-08-18. The transient is noticeably bluer than the host galaxy.

Figure 21

Figure 7. The rapid spectral evolution of AT2017gfo. The ANU 2.3-m WiFeS, SALT RSS (2 spectra), and AAT AAOmega+2dF spectra obtained at 0.93, 1.18, 2.16, and 6.92 d, respectively, after GW detection are shown and labelled. Vertical grey bands denote telluric features that are not well removed in some spectra. Blackbody model fits (red curves) over the full spectra result in temperatures of 6 275 K (WiFeS), 6 475 and 4 700 K (RSS), and 2 080 K (AAOmega). Peaks in the WiFeS, RSS, and AAOmega continua correspond to ~6 400 K, ~5 600 K, ~4 400 K, and <3 200 K, respectively.

Figure 22

Figure 8. AAT fibre spectrum of NGC 4993 in a 2-arcsec region at the position of AT2017gfo. A fit to the stellar light (blue) and the stellar light and nebular emission (red) are shown. The fits include the flux of AT2017gfo (at +6.92 d) and the galaxy. Several common atomic transitions are marked and a zoom-in of the Hα region is shown. The spectrum is corrected for line-of-sight Milky Way extinction.

Figure 23

Figure 9. Comparison of models to optical photometry with Zadko (squares, r-band), AST3-2 (diamonds, i-band), Etelman/VIRT (triangles, C-filter presented in the central panel), and SkyMapper (circles, gri-bands). The solid black line is the GS02 model of a short GRB afterglow. The dark orange region represents the kilonova model by Tanaka & Hotokezaka (2013). The solid red line represents the Barnes & Kasen (2013) model for 56Ni+r-process opacities. The blue lines represent the free neutron-powered blue precursor (solid: vej = 0.2c, Mej = 0.01M; dashed: vej = 0.2c, Mej = 0.1M Metzger et al. 2015), while the black dashed and dot–dashed lines represent the Metzger et al. (2015) and Barnes & Kasen (2013) models together. The figure is organised in three panels, presenting photometry and overlaid models in g-band (top), r-band (centre), and i-band (bottom).