31 research outputs found
Artificial neural networks for selection of pulsar candidates from the radio continuum surveys
Pulsar search with time-domain observation is very computationally expensive
and data volume will be enormous with the next generation telescopes such as
the Square Kilometre Array. We apply artificial neural networks (ANNs), a
machine learning method, for efficient selection of pulsar candidates from
radio continuum surveys, which are much cheaper than time-domain observation.
With observed quantities such as radio fluxes, sky position and compactness as
inputs, our ANNs output the "score" that indicates the degree of likeliness of
an object to be a pulsar. We demonstrate ANNs based on existing survey data by
the TIFR GMRT Sky Survey (TGSS) and the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS) and test
their performance. Precision, which is the ratio of the number of pulsars
classified correctly as pulsars to that of any objects classified as pulsars,
is about 96. Finally, we apply the trained ANNs to unidentified radio
sources and our fiducial ANN with five inputs (the galactic longitude and
latitude, the TGSS and NVSS fluxes and compactness) generates 2,436 pulsar
candidates from 456,866 unidentified radio sources. These candidates need to be
confirmed if they are truly pulsars by time-domain observations. More
information such as polarization will narrow the candidates down further.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Dark age consistency in the 21cm global signal
We propose a new observable for the 21cm global signal during the dark ages,
the dark-age consistency ratio, which is motivated from the fact that the shape
of the functional form of the brightness temperature against the frequency is
cosmological-parameter independent in the standard CDM model. The
dark-age consistency ratio takes a certain definite value in the CDM
case, which can serve as a critical test of the model and probe those beyond
the standard one. The new observable just needs measurements of the brightness
temperature at a few frequency bands during the dark ages, and thus it allows
us to test cosmological scenarios even with limited information on the global
signal.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure