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New astro-ph.* submissions cross listed on stat.*, cs.AI, physics.data-an, cs.LG staritng 202511062000 and ending 202511122000

Feed last updated: 2025-11-12T04:14:38Z

Blind Strong Gravitational Lensing Inversion: Joint Inference of Source and Lens Mass with Score-Based Models

Authors: Gabriel Missael Barco, Ronan Legin, Connor Stone, Yashar Hezaveh, Laurence Perreault-Levasseur
Comments: 18 pages, 9 figures, 1 table. Accepted to the NeurIPS 2025 Workshop on Machine Learning and the Physical Sciences
Primary Category: astro-ph.IM
All Categories: astro-ph.IM, astro-ph.CO, cs.LG

Score-based models can serve as expressive, data-driven priors for scientific inverse problems. In strong gravitational lensing, they enable posterior inference of a background galaxy from its distorted, multiply-imaged observation. Previous work, however, assumes that the lens mass distribution (and thus the forward operator) is known. We relax this assumption by jointly inferring the source and a parametric lens-mass profile, using a sampler based on GibbsDDRM but operating in continuous time. The resulting reconstructions yield residuals consistent with the observational noise, and the marginal posteriors of the lens parameters recover true values without systematic bias. To our knowledge, this is the first successful demonstration of joint source-and-lens inference with a score-based prior.


Galactification: painting galaxies onto dark matter only simulations using a transformer-based model

Authors: Shivam Pandey, Christopher C. Lovell, Chirag Modi, Benjamin D. Wandelt
Comments: 8 pages, 4 figures. , accepted at Machine Learning and the Physical Sciences Workshop at NeurIPS 2025
Primary Category: astro-ph.CO
All Categories: astro-ph.CO, astro-ph.IM, cs.LG

Connecting the formation and evolution of galaxies to the large-scale structure is crucial for interpreting cosmological observations. While hydrodynamical simulations accurately model the correlated properties of galaxies, they are computationally prohibitive to run over volumes that match modern surveys. We address this by developing a framework to rapidly generate mock galaxy catalogs conditioned on inexpensive dark-matter-only simulations. We present a multi-modal, transformer-based model that takes 3D dark matter density and velocity fields as input, and outputs a corresponding point cloud of galaxies with their physical properties. We demonstrate that our trained model faithfully reproduces a variety of galaxy summary statistics and correctly captures their variation with changes in the underlying cosmological and astrophysical parameters, making it the first accelerated forward model to capture all the relevant galaxy properties, their full spatial distribution, and their conditional dependencies in hydrosimulations.


Emulating Radiative Transfer in Astrophysical Environments

Authors: Rune Rost, Lorenzo Branca, Tobias Buck
Comments: Accepted at the Differentiable Systems and Scientific Machine Learning workshop at EurIPS, 2025
Primary Category: astro-ph.IM
All Categories: astro-ph.IM, astro-ph.GA, cs.LG

Radiative transfer is a fundamental process in astrophysics, essential for both interpreting observations and modeling thermal and dynamical feedback in simulations via ionizing radiation and photon pressure. However, numerically solving the underlying radiative transfer equation is computationally intensive due to the complex interaction of light with matter and the disparity between the speed of light and the typical gas velocities in astrophysical environments, making it particularly expensive to include the effects of on-the-fly radiation in hydrodynamic simulations. This motivates the development of surrogate models that can significantly accelerate radiative transfer calculations while preserving high accuracy. We present a surrogate model based on a Fourier Neural Operator architecture combined with U-Nets. Our model approximates three-dimensional, monochromatic radiative transfer in time-dependent regimes, in absorption-emission approximation, achieving speedups of more than 2 orders of magnitude while maintaining an average relative error below 3%, demonstrating our approach's potential to be integrated into state-of-the-art hydrodynamic simulations.