Accelerating lensed quasar discovery and modeling with physics-informed variational autoencoders
December 17, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· π Astronomy & Astrophysics
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Authors
Irham T. Andika, Stefan Schuldt, Sherry H. Suyu, Satadru Bag, Raoul CaΓ±ameras, Alejandra Melo, Claudio Grillo, James H. H. Chan
arXiv ID
2412.12709
Category
astro-ph.GA
Cross-listed
astro-ph.CO,
astro-ph.IM,
cs.CV,
cs.LG
Citations
2
Venue
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Last Checked
3 months ago
Abstract
Strongly lensed quasars provide valuable insights into the rate of cosmic expansion, the distribution of dark matter in foreground deflectors, and the characteristics of quasar hosts. However, detecting them in astronomical images is difficult due to the prevalence of non-lensing objects. To address this challenge, we developed a generative deep learning model called VariLens, built upon a physics-informed variational autoencoder. This model seamlessly integrates three essential modules: image reconstruction, object classification, and lens modeling, offering a fast and comprehensive approach to strong lens analysis. VariLens is capable of rapidly determining both (1) the probability that an object is a lens system and (2) key parameters of a singular isothermal ellipsoid (SIE) mass model -- including the Einstein radius ($ΞΈ_\mathrm{E}$), lens center, and ellipticity -- in just milliseconds using a single CPU. A direct comparison of VariLens estimates with traditional lens modeling for 20 known lensed quasars within the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) footprint shows good agreement, with both results consistent within $2Ο$ for systems with $ΞΈ_\mathrm{E}<3$ arcsecs. To identify new lensed quasar candidates, we begin with an initial sample of approximately 80 million sources, combining HSC data with multiwavelength information from various surveys. After applying a photometric preselection aimed at locating $z>1.5$ sources, the number of candidates was reduced to 710,966. Subsequently, VariLens highlights 13,831 sources, each showing a high likelihood of being a lens. A visual assessment of these objects results in 42 promising candidates that await spectroscopic confirmation. These results underscore the potential of automated deep learning pipelines to efficiently detect and model strong lenses in large datasets.
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