A New Automatic Method to Identify Galaxy Mergers I. Description and Application to the STAGES Survey
Carlos Hoyos, Alfonso Aragon-Salamanca, Meghan E. Gray, David T., Maltby, Eric F. Bell, Fabio D. Barazza, Asmus Boehm, Boris Haussler, Knud, Jahnke, Sharda Jogee, Kyle P. Lane, Daniel H. McIntosh, Christian Wolf

TL;DR
This paper introduces an automatic morphological method using residual images to identify galaxy mergers, focusing on detecting minor mergers with high completeness but also high contamination, optimized for the STAGES survey data.
Contribution
The paper presents a new diagnostic based on residual flux and asymmetry that improves merger detection, especially for minor mergers, compared to existing structural parameters.
Findings
High completeness in merger detection.
Effective at identifying minor mergers.
Best used as a negative merger test.
Abstract
We present an automatic method to identify galaxy mergers using the morphological information contained in the residual images of galaxies after the subtraction of a Sersic model. The removal of the bulk signal from the host galaxy light is done with the aim of detecting the fainter minor mergers. The specific morphological parameters that are used in the merger diagnostic suggested here are the Residual Flux Fraction and the asymmetry of the residuals. The new diagnostic has been calibrated and optimized so that the resulting merger sample is very complete. However, the contamination by non-mergers is also high. If the same optimization method is adopted for combinations of other structural parameters such as the CAS system, the merger indicator we introduce yields merger samples of equal or higher statistical quality than the samples obtained through the use of other structural…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
