Finding AGN remnant candidates based on radio morphology with machine learning [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2304.05813


Remnant radio galaxies represent the dying phase of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN). Large samples of remnant radio galaxies are important for quantifying the radio galaxy life cycle. The remnants of radio-loud AGN can be identified in radio sky surveys based on their spectral index, or, complementary, through visual inspection based on their radio morphology. However, this is extremely time-consuming when applied to the new large and sensitive radio surveys. Here we aim to reduce the amount of visual inspection required to find AGN remnants based on their morphology, through supervised machine learning trained on an existing sample of remnant candidates. For a dataset of 4107 radio sources, with angular sizes larger than 60 arcsec, from the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) Two-Metre Sky Survey second data release (LoTSS-DR2), we started with 151 radio sources that were visually classified as ‘AGN remnant candidate’. We derived a wide range of morphological features for all radio sources from their corresponding Stokes-I images: from simple source catalogue-derived properties, to clustered Haralick-features, and self-organising map (SOM) derived morphological features. We trained a random forest classifier to separate the ‘AGN remnant candidates’ from the not yet inspected sources. The SOM-derived features and the total to peak flux ratio of a source are shown to be most salient to the classifier. We estimate that $31\pm5\%$ of sources with positive predictions from our classifier will be labelled ‘AGN remnant candidates’ upon visual inspection, while we estimate the upper bound of the $95\%$ confidence interval for ‘AGN remnant candidates’ in the negative predictions at $8\%$. Visual inspection of just the positive predictions reduces the number of radio sources requiring visual inspection by $73\%$.

Read this paper on arXiv…

R. Mostert, R. Morganti, M. Brienza, et. al.
Thu, 13 Apr 23
18/59

Comments: 23 pages; accepted for publication in A&A