학술논문

Optical and X-ray early follow-up of ANTARES neutrino alerts
Document Type
Working Paper
Author
Adrian-Martinez, S.Ageron, M.Albert, A.Samarai, I. AlAndre, M.Anton, G.Ardid, M.Aubert, J. -J.Baret, B.Barrios-Marti, J.Basa, S.Bertin, V.Biagi, S.Bogazzi, C.Bormuth, R.Bou-Cabo, M.Bouwhuis, M. C.Bruijn, R.Brunner, J.Busto, J.Capone, A.Caramete, L.Carr, J.Chiarusi, T.Circella, M.Coniglione, R.Costantini, H.Coyle, P.Creusot, A.Dekeyser, I.Deschamps, A.De Bonis, G.Distefano, C.Donzaud, C.Dornic, D.Drouhin, D.Dumas, A.Eberl, T.Elsasser, D.Enzenhofer, A.Fehn, K.Felis, I.Fermani, P.Folger, F.Fusco, L. A.Galata, S.Gay, P.Geißelsoder, S.Geyer, K.Giordano, V.Gleixner, A.Gracia-Ruiz, R.Graf, K.van Haren, H.Heijboer, A. J.Hello, Y.Hernandez-Rey, J. J.Herrero, A.Hoßl, J.Hofestadt, J.Hugon, C.James, C. Wde Jong, M.Kadler, M.Kalekin, O.Katz, U.Kießling, D.Kooijman, P.Kouchner, A.Kreykenbohm, I.Kulikovskiy, V.Lahmann, R.Lambard, G.Lattuada, D.Lefevre, D.Leonora, E.Loucatos, S.Mangano, S.Marcelin, M.Margiotta, A.Martinez-Mora, J. A.Martini, S.Mathieu, A.Michael, T.Migliozzi, P.Moussa, A.Mueller, C.Neff, M.Nezri, E.Pavalas, G. E.Pellegrino, C.Perrina, C.Piattelli, P.Popa, V.Pradier, T.Racca, C.Riccobene, G.Richter, R.Roensch, K.Rostovtsev, A.Saldana, M.Samtleben, D. F. E.Sanguineti, M.Sapienza, P.Schmid, J.Schnabel, J.Schulte, S.Schüssler, F.Seitz, T.Sieger, C.Spurio, M.Steijger, J. J. M.Stolarczyk, Th.Sanchez-Losa, A.Taiuti, M.Tamburini, C.Trovato, A.Tselengidou, M.Tonnis, C.Turpin, D.Vallage, B.Vallee, C.Van Elewyck, V.Vecchi, M.Visser, E.Vivolo, D.Wagner, S.Wilms, J.Zornoza, J. D.Zuniga, J.Klotz, A.Boer, M.Van Suu, A. LeAkerlof, C.Zheng, W.Evans, P.Gehrels, N.Kennea, J.Osborne, J. P.Coward, D. M.
Source
Subject
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Language
Abstract
High-energy neutrinos could be produced in the interaction of charged cosmic rays with matter or radiation surrounding astrophysical sources. Even with the recent detection of extraterrestrial high-energy neutrinos by the IceCube experiment, no astrophysical neutrino source has yet been discovered. Transient sources, such as gamma-ray bursts, core-collapse supernovae, or active galactic nuclei are promising candidates. Multi-messenger programs offer a unique opportunity to detect these transient sources. By combining the information provided by the ANTARES neutrino telescope with information coming from other observatories, the probability of detecting a source is enhanced, allowing the possibility of identifying a neutrino progenitor from a single detected event. A method based on optical and X-ray follow-ups of high-energy neutrino alerts has been developed within the ANTARES collaboration. This program, denoted as TAToO, triggers a network of robotic optical telescopes (TAROT and ROTSE) and the Swift-XRT with a delay of only a few seconds after a neutrino detection, and is therefore well-suited to search for fast transient sources. To identify an optical or X-ray counterpart to a neutrino signal, the images provided by the follow-up observations are analysed with dedicated pipelines. A total of 42 alerts with optical and 7 alerts with X-ray images taken with a maximum delay of 24 hours after the neutrino trigger have been analysed. No optical or X-ray counterparts associated to the neutrino triggers have been found, and upper limits on transient source magnitudes have been derived. The probability to reject the gamma-ray burst origin hypothesis has been computed for each alert.