Publication Details

Multiwavelength classification of X-ray selected galaxy cluster candidates using convolutional neural networks

KOSIBA Matěj and BURGET Lukáš et al. Multiwavelength classification of X-ray selected galaxy cluster candidates using convolutional neural networks. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 496, no. 4, 2020, pp. 4141-4153. ISSN 1365-2966. Available from: https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article-abstract/496/4/4141/5858922?redirectedFrom=fulltext
Czech title
Klasifikace potenciálních shluků galaxií vybraných v rentgenovém oboru na více vlnových délkách pomocí konvolučních neuronových sítí
Type
journal article
Language
english
Authors
Kosiba Matěj (MUNI)
and others
URL
Keywords

galaxies: clusters: general - methods: data analysis - techniques: image processing

Abstract

Galaxy clusters appear as extended sources in XMM-Newton images, but not all extended sources are clusters. So, their proper classification requires visual inspection with optical images, which is a slow process with biases that are almost impossible to model. We tackle this problem with a novel approach, using convolutional neural networks (CNNs), a state-of-the-art image classification tool, for automatic classification of galaxy cluster candidates. We train the networks on combined XMM-Newton X-ray observations with their optical counterparts from the all-sky Digitized Sky Survey. Our data set originates from the XMM CLuster Archive Super Survey (X-CLASS) survey sample of galaxy cluster candidates, selected by a specially developed pipeline, the XAmin, tailored for extended source detection and characterization. Our data set contains 1707 galaxy cluster candidates classified by experts. Additionally, we create an official Zooniverse citizen science project, The Hunt for Galaxy Clusters, to probe whether citizen volunteers could help in a challenging task of galaxy cluster visual confirmation. The project contained 1600 galaxy cluster candidates in total of which 404 overlap with the experts sample. The networks were trained on expert and Zooniverse data separately. The CNN test sample contains 85 spectroscopically confirmed clusters and 85 non-clusters that appear in both data sets. Our custom network achieved the best performance in the binary classification of clusters and non-clusters, acquiring accuracy of 90percent, averaged after 10 runs. The results of using CNNs on combined X-ray and optical data for galaxy cluster candidate classification are encouraging, and there is a lot of potential for future usage and improvements.

Published
2020
Pages
4141-4153
Journal
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, vol. 496, no. 4, ISSN 1365-2966
Publisher
Royal Astronomical Society(RAS)
DOI
UT WoS
000574923200007
EID Scopus
BibTeX
@ARTICLE{FITPUB12349,
   author = "Mat\v{e}j Kosiba and Luk\'{a}\v{s} Burget and et al.",
   title = "Multiwavelength classification of X-ray selected galaxy cluster candidates using convolutional neural networks",
   pages = "4141--4153",
   journal = "Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society",
   volume = 496,
   number = 4,
   year = 2020,
   ISSN = "1365-2966",
   doi = "10.1093/mnras/staa1723",
   language = "english",
   url = "https://www.fit.vut.cz/research/publication/12349"
}
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