42 research outputs found
Dynamical Mass Measurements of Contaminated Galaxy Clusters Using Machine Learning
We study dynamical mass measurements of galaxy clusters contaminated by
interlopers and show that a modern machine learning (ML) algorithm can predict
masses by better than a factor of two compared to a standard scaling relation
approach. We create two mock catalogs from Multidark's publicly available
-body MDPL1 simulation, one with perfect galaxy cluster membership
information and the other where a simple cylindrical cut around the cluster
center allows interlopers to contaminate the clusters. In the standard
approach, we use a power-law scaling relation to infer cluster mass from galaxy
line-of-sight (LOS) velocity dispersion. Assuming perfect membership knowledge,
this unrealistic case produces a wide fractional mass error distribution, with
a width of . Interlopers introduce additional
scatter, significantly widening the error distribution further
(). We employ the support distribution machine (SDM)
class of algorithms to learn from distributions of data to predict single
values. Applied to distributions of galaxy observables such as LOS velocity and
projected distance from the cluster center, SDM yields better than a
factor-of-two improvement () for the contaminated
case. Remarkably, SDM applied to contaminated clusters is better able to
recover masses than even the scaling relation approach applied to
uncontaminated clusters. We show that the SDM method more accurately reproduces
the cluster mass function, making it a valuable tool for employing cluster
observations to evaluate cosmological models.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication at Ap
A Deep Learning Approach to Galaxy Cluster X-ray Masses
We present a machine-learning approach for estimating galaxy cluster masses
from Chandra mock images. We utilize a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), a
deep machine learning tool commonly used in image recognition tasks. The CNN is
trained and tested on our sample of 7,896 Chandra X-ray mock observations,
which are based on 329 massive clusters from the IllustrisTNG simulation. Our
CNN learns from a low resolution spatial distribution of photon counts and does
not use spectral information. Despite our simplifying assumption to neglect
spectral information, the resulting mass values estimated by the CNN exhibit
small bias in comparison to the true masses of the simulated clusters (-0.02
dex) and reproduce the cluster masses with low intrinsic scatter, 8% in our
best fold and 12% averaging over all. In contrast, a more standard core-excised
luminosity method achieves 15-18% scatter. We interpret the results with an
approach inspired by Google DeepDream and find that the CNN ignores the central
regions of clusters, which are known to have high scatter with mass.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Dynamical Mass Measurements of Contaminated Galaxy Clusters Using Machine Learning
We study dynamical mass measurements of galaxy clusters contaminated by interlopers and show that a modern
machine learning algorithm can predict masses by better than a factor of two compared to a standard scaling
relation approach. We create two mock catalogs from Multidark’s publicly available N-body MDPL1 simulation,
one with perfect galaxy cluster membership information and the other where a simple cylindrical cut around the
cluster center allows interlopers to contaminate the clusters. In the standard approach, we use a power-law scaling
relation to infer cluster mass from galaxy line-of-sight (LOS) velocity dispersion. Assuming perfect membership
knowledge, this unrealistic case produces a wide fractional mass error distribution, with a width of D » 0.87.
Interlopers introduce additional scatter, significantly widening the error distribution further (D » 2.13). We
employ the support distribution machine (SDM) class of algorithms to learn from distributions of data to predict
single values. Applied to distributions of galaxy observables such as LOS velocity and projected distance from the
cluster center, SDM yields better than a factor-of-two improvement (D » 0.67) for the contaminated case.
Remarkably, SDM applied to contaminated clusters is better able to recover masses than even the scaling relation
approach applied to uncontaminated clusters. We show that the SDM method more accurately reproduces the
cluster mass function, making it a valuable tool for employing cluster observations to evaluate cosmological
models
Constructing Impactful Machine Learning Research for Astronomy: Best Practices for Researchers and Reviewers
Machine learning has rapidly become a tool of choice for the astronomical
community. It is being applied across a wide range of wavelengths and problems,
from the classification of transients to neural network emulators of
cosmological simulations, and is shifting paradigms about how we generate and
report scientific results. At the same time, this class of method comes with
its own set of best practices, challenges, and drawbacks, which, at present,
are often reported on incompletely in the astrophysical literature. With this
paper, we aim to provide a primer to the astronomical community, including
authors, reviewers, and editors, on how to implement machine learning models
and report their results in a way that ensures the accuracy of the results,
reproducibility of the findings, and usefulness of the method.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures; submitted to the Bulletin of the American
Astronomical Societ
Increasing the Discovery Space in Astrophysics - A Collation of Six Submitted White Papers
We write in response to the call from the 2020 Decadal Survey to submit white
papers illustrating the most pressing scientific questions in astrophysics for
the coming decade. We propose exploration as the central question for the
Decadal Committee's discussions.The history of astronomy shows that paradigm
changing discoveries are not driven by well formulated scientific questions,
based on the knowledge of the time. They were instead the result of the
increase in discovery space fostered by new telescopes and instruments. An
additional tool for increasing the discovery space is provided by the analysis
and mining of the increasingly larger amount of archival data available to
astronomers. Revolutionary observing facilities, and the state of the art
astronomy archives needed to support these facilities, will open up the
universe to new discovery. Here we focus on exploration for compact objects and
multi messenger science. This white paper includes science examples of the
power of the discovery approach, encompassing all the areas of astrophysics
covered by the 2020 Decadal Survey