Automated Real-Time Classification and Decision Making in Massive Data Streams from Synoptic Sky Surveys
S. G. Djorgovski, A. A. Mahabal, C. Donalek, M. J. Graham, A. J. Drake, (Caltech), M. Turmon, T. Fuchs (JPL)

TL;DR
This paper discusses the development of machine learning tools for real-time classification and decision-making in massive data streams from sky surveys, enabling rapid response to transient astronomical phenomena.
Contribution
It introduces automated machine learning methods tailored for real-time analysis of astronomical data streams, addressing the challenge of rapid response to transient events.
Findings
Effective detection and classification of transient sky phenomena.
Improved response times for astronomical event follow-up.
Potential applications in other real-time sensor networks.
Abstract
The nature of scientific and technological data collection is evolving rapidly: data volumes and rates grow exponentially, with increasing complexity and information content, and there has been a transition from static data sets to data streams that must be analyzed in real time. Interesting or anomalous phenomena must be quickly characterized and followed up with additional measurements via optimal deployment of limited assets. Modern astronomy presents a variety of such phenomena in the form of transient events in digital synoptic sky surveys, including cosmic explosions (supernovae, gamma ray bursts), relativistic phenomena (black hole formation, jets), potentially hazardous asteroids, etc. We have been developing a set of machine learning tools to detect, classify and plan a response to transient events for astronomy applications, using the Catalina Real-time Transient Survey (CRTS)…
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