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A Deep Learning Approach to Galaxy Cluster X-ray Masses

1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.

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abstract

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.

fields

astro-ph.CO 1

years

2026 1

verdicts

UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

ComPACT: Mass-Redshift Properties of the galaxy cluster catalogue

astro-ph.CO · 2026-05-19 · unverdicted · novelty 4.0

ComPACT is a new SZ-selected galaxy cluster catalogue from CNN analysis of ACT+Planck data with 2,962 candidates, ~60% confirmation, 116 new redshifts, 158 new masses, and five new massive clusters at z>0.7 that increase the known high-mass high-z population by ~10%.

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Showing 1 of 1 citing paper.

  • ComPACT: Mass-Redshift Properties of the galaxy cluster catalogue astro-ph.CO · 2026-05-19 · unverdicted · none · ref 3 · internal anchor

    ComPACT is a new SZ-selected galaxy cluster catalogue from CNN analysis of ACT+Planck data with 2,962 candidates, ~60% confirmation, 116 new redshifts, 158 new masses, and five new massive clusters at z>0.7 that increase the known high-mass high-z population by ~10%.