Using an artificial neural network to classify multicomponent emission lines with integral field spectroscopy from SAMI and S7

E. J. Hampton*, A. M. Medling, B. Groves, L. Kewley, M. Dopita, R. Davies, I. T. Ho, M. Kaasinen, S. Leslie, R. Sharp, S. M. Sweet, A. D. Thomas, J. Allen, J. Bland-Hawthorn, S. Brough, J. J. Bryant, S. Croom, M. Goodwin, A. Green, I. S. KonstantantopoulosJ. Lawrence, R. Lopez-Sańchez, N. P.F. Lorente, R. McElroy, M. S. Owers, S. N. Richards, P. Shastri

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    26 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Integral field spectroscopy (IFS) surveys are changing how we study galaxies and are creating vastly more spectroscopic data available than before. The large number of resulting spectra makes visual inspection of emission line fits an infeasible option. Here, we present a demonstration of an artificial neural network (ANN) that determines the number of Gaussian components needed to describe the complex emission line velocity structures observed in galaxies after being fit with LZIFU.We apply our ANN to IFS data for the S7 survey, conducted using theWide Field Spectrograph on theANU2.3mTelescope, and the SAMI Galaxy Survey, conducted using the SAMI instrument on the 4 m Anglo-Australian Telescope. We use the spectral fitting code LZIFU (Ho et al. 2016a) to fit the emission line spectra of individual spaxels from S7 and SAMI data cubes with 1-, 2- and 3-Gaussian components. We demonstrate that using an ANN is comparable to astronomers performing the same visual inspection task of determining the best number of Gaussian components to describe the physical processes in galaxies. The advantage of our ANN is that it is capable of processing the spectra for thousands of galaxies in minutes, as compared to the years this task would take individual astronomers to complete by visual inspection.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3395-3416
    Number of pages22
    JournalMonthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
    Volume470
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 21 Sept 2017

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