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The recent milestones in multi-messenger astronomy have opened new ways to study the Unverse. The unprecedented gravitational wave (GW) follow-up campaigns established the power that the combination of different messengers has to identify and study the nature and evolution of astrophysical phenomena. Here we focus on the search for high-energy gamma ray emission as electromagnetic counterpart of compact binary coalescences with the H.E.S.S. Imaging Air Cherenkov Telescopes (IACTs). In this contribution, the optimized strategies developed specifically for the prompt follow-up of gravitational wave events with H.E.S.S are presented. As illustration, the successful observation campaigns up to this time will be described, including the ones during Observation Run O2 on the binary black hole (BH-BH) merger GW170814 and the binary neutron star (NS-NS) merger GW170817, and an update on recent events occurring during O3. Results of these searches are presented and the constraints that prompt observations can put on very-high-energy, non-thermal emission, are briefly discussed. Finally, an outlook on further improvements for the gravitational waves follow-up program with H.E.S.S. will be provided.
Shell-type supernova remnants (SNRs) are considered prime candidates for the acceleration of Galactic cosmic rays (CRs) up to the knee of the CR spectrum at $mathrm{E} approx mathrm{3}times mathrm{10}^mathrm{15}$ eV. Our Milky Way galaxy hosts more t
The detection of electromagnetic (EM) emission following the gravitational wave (GW) event GW170817 opened the era of multi-messenger astronomy with GWs and provided the first direct evidence that at least a fraction of binary neutron star (BNS) merg
Several classes of sources are known to emit different messengers. Among them, transient sources are a special case, due to their serendipitous occurrence, time variability and duration on different timescales. They are associated with explosive and
The first observations by a worldwide network of advanced interferometric gravitational wave detectors offer a unique opportunity for the astronomical community. At design sensitivity, these facilities will be able to detect coalescing binary neutron
With the discovery of gravitational waves (GW), attention has turned towards detecting counterparts to these sources. In discussions on counterpart signatures and multi-messenger follow-up strategies to GW detections, ultra-violet (UV) signatures hav