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Classifying <i>Kepler</i> light curves for 12 000 A and F stars using supervised feature-based machine learning

Nicholas H. Barbara, T. R. Bedding, Ben Fulcher, Simon J. Murphy, Timothy Van Reeth

2022Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT With the availability of large-scale surveys like Kepler and TESS, there is a pressing need for automated methods to classify light curves according to known classes of variable stars. We introduce a new algorithm for classifying light curves that compares 7000 time-series features to find those that most effectively classify a given set of light curves. We apply our method to Kepler light curves for stars with effective temperatures in the range 6500–10 000 K. We show that the sample can be meaningfully represented in an interpretable 5D feature space that separates seven major classes of light curves (δ Scuti stars, γ Doradus stars, RR Lyrae stars, rotational variables, contact eclipsing binaries, detached eclipsing binaries, and non-variables). We achieve a balanced classification accuracy of 82 per cent on an independent test set of Kepler stars using a Gaussian mixture model classifier. We use our method to classify 12 000 Kepler light curves from Quarter 9 and provide a catalogue of the results. We further outline a confidence heuristic based on probability density to search our catalogue and extract candidate lists of correctly classified variable stars.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsKeplerLight curveStarsFeature (linguistics)AstronomyAstrophysicsArtificial intelligencePhilosophyLinguisticsComputer scienceAstronomical Observations and InstrumentationStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesAstronomy and Astrophysical Research
Classifying <i>Kepler</i> light curves for 12 000 A and F stars using supervised feature-based machine learning | Litcius