search_query=cat:astro-ph.*+AND+lastUpdatedDate:[202512182000+TO+202512242000]&start=0&max_results=5000

New astro-ph.* submissions cross listed on cs.LG, stat.*, cs.AI, physics.data-an staritng 202512182000 and ending 202512242000

Feed last updated: 2025-12-24T04:27:43Z

Machine learning for the early classification of broad-lined Ic supernovae

Authors: Laura Cotter, Antonio Martin Carrillo, Joseph Fisher, Gabriel Finneran, Gregory Corcoran, Jennifer Lebron
Comments: There are 10 pages and 8 figures (2 individual figures and 3 where there are 2 subfigures)
Primary Category: astro-ph.HE
All Categories: astro-ph.HE, physics.data-an

Science is currently at an age where there is more data than we know how to deal with. Machine learning (ML) is an emerging tool that is useful in drawing valuable science out of incomprehensibly large datasets, identifying complex trends in data that are otherwise overlooked. Moreover, ML can potentially enhance the quality and quantity of scientific data as it is collected. This paper explores how a new ML method can improve the rate of classification of rare Ic-BL supernovae (SNe). New parameters called magnitude rates were introduced to train ML models to identify SNe Ic-BL in large datasets. The same methodology was applied to a population of SN Ia transients to see if the methodology could be reproducible with another SN class. Three magnitudes, three time differences, two magnitude rates and the second derivative of these rates were calculated using the first three available photometric data points in a single filter. Initial investigations show that the Random Forest algorithm provides a strong foundation for the early classifications SNe Ic-BL and SNe Ia. Testing this model again on an unseen dataset shows that the model can identify upward of 13% of the total true SN Ic-BL population, significantly improving upon current methods. By implementing a dedicated observation campaign using this model, the number of SN Ic-BL classified and the quality of early-time data collected each year will see considerable growth in the near future.


Robust and scalable simulation-based inference for gravitational wave signals with gaps

Authors: Ruiting Mao, Jeong Eun Lee, Matthew C. Edwards
Comments: 28 pages, 13 figures
Primary Category: astro-ph.IM
All Categories: astro-ph.IM, gr-qc, physics.data-an, physics.ins-det

The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) data stream will inevitably contain gaps due to maintenance and environmental disturbances, introducing nonstationarities and spectral leakage that compromise standard frequency-domain likelihood evaluations. We present a scalable Simulation-Based Inference (SBI) framework capable of robust parameter estimation directly from gapped time-series data. We employ Flow Matching Posterior Estimation (FMPE) conditioned on a learned summary of the data, optimized through an end-to-end training strategy. To address the computational challenges of long-duration signals, we propose a dual-pathway summarizer architecture: a 1D Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) operating on the time domain for high precision, and a novel wavelet-based 2D CNN utilizing asymmetric, dilated kernels to achieve scalability for datasets spanning months. We demonstrate the efficacy of this framework on simulated Galactic Binary-like signals, showing that our joint training approach yields tighter, unbiased posteriors compared to two-stage reconstruction pipelines. Furthermore, we provide the first systematic comparison showing that FMPE offers superior stability and coverage calibration over conventional Normalizing Flows in the presence of severe data artifacts.