We discuss optimal strategy for follow-up observations by 1-3 m class
optical/infrared telescopes which target optical/infrared counterparts of
gravitational wave events detected with two laser interferometric gravitational
wave detectors. The probability maps of transient sources, such as coalescing
neutron stars and/or black holes, determined by two laser interferometers
generally spread widely. They include the distant region where it is difficult
for small aperture telescopes to observe the optical/infrared counterparts. For
small telescopes, there is a possibility that it is more advantageous to search
for nearby region even if the probability inferred by two gravitational wave
detectors is low. We show that in the case of the first three events of
advanced LIGO, the posterior probability map, derived by using a distance prior
restricted to a nearby region, is different from that derived without such
restriction. This suggests that the optimal strategy for small telescopes to
perform follow-up observation of LIGO-Virgo's three events are different from
what has been searched so far. We also show that, when the binary is nearly
edge-on, it is possible that the true direction is not included in the 90%
posterior probability region. We discuss the optimal strategy to perform
optical/infrared follow-up observation with small aperture telescopes based on
these facts.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D, added
cases of design sensitivitie