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      Gravitational wave alert follow-up strategy in the H.E.S.S. multi-messenger framework

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          Abstract

          The H.E.S.S. high-energy gamma-ray observatory is member of the Virgo/LIGO electromagnetic follow-up effort since early 2014. Its capability for transient follow-up studies benefits from its large field of view, rapid response time and high sensitivity. Drawing from the experience gained from other science cases like gamma-ray bursts and high-energy neutrino follow-ups we demonstrate the high perspectives for new types of analyses like the search for gravitational wave counterparts and the study of multi-messenger signals from binary neutron star mergers. This contribution aims to present the potential pointing strategy that the H.E.S.S. observatory would carry out following an alert from gravitational wave observatories. We will discuss several key points like the use of information from a galaxy catalogue, the time-dependent visibility of sky regions and the automatic handling of gravitational wave uncertainty maps, that will enable an optimized choice of the pointing directions. Finally, based on simulated binary neutron star mergers, the performance of the outlined gravitational wave-alert observations will be presented.

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          Self-consistent triaxial models

          We present self-consistent triaxial stellar systems that have analytic distribution functions (DFs) expressed in terms of the actions. These provide triaxial density profiles with cores or cusps at the centre. They are the first self-consistent triaxial models with analytic DFs suitable for modelling giant ellipticals and dark haloes. Specifically, we study triaxial models that reproduce the Hernquist profile from Williams & Evans (2015), as well as flattened isochrones of the form proposed by Binney (2014). We explore the kinematics and orbital structure of these models in some detail. The models typically become more radially anisotropic on moving outwards, have velocity ellipsoids aligned in Cartesian coordinates in the centre and aligned in spherical polar coordinates in the outer parts. In projection, the ellipticity of the isophotes and the position angle of the major axis of our models generally changes with radius. So, a natural application is to elliptical galaxies that exhibit isophote twisting. As triaxial St\"ackel models do not show isophote twists, our DFs are the first to generate mass density distributions that do exhibit this phenomenon, typically with a gradient of \(\approx 10^\circ\)/effective radius, which is comparable to the data. Triaxiality is a natural consequence of models that are susceptible to the radial orbit instability. We show how a family of spherical models with anisotropy profiles that transition from isotropic at the centre to radially anisotropic becomes unstable when the outer anisotropy is made sufficiently radial. Models with a larger outer anisotropy can be constructed but are found to be triaxial. We argue that the onset of the radial orbit instability can be identified with the transition point when adiabatic relaxation yields strongly triaxial rather than weakly spherical endpoints.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            2017-05-29
            Article
            1705.10138
            89ca3531-b805-4f4a-9112-efed883fc2ac

            http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

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            Custom metadata
            Proceedings Rencontres de Moriond 2017 (VHEPU)
            astro-ph.IM astro-ph.HE

            Instrumentation & Methods for astrophysics,High energy astrophysical phenomena

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