VEXAS: VISTA EXtension to Auxiliary Surveys -- Data Release 2: Machine-learning based classification of sources in the Southern Hemisphere
V. Khramtsov, C. Spiniello, A. Agnello, A. Sergeyev

TL;DR
This paper presents the second data release of VEXAS, a large multi-wavelength catalog of objects in the Southern Hemisphere classified into stars, galaxies, and quasars using ensemble machine learning models, with over 90 million objects classified.
Contribution
The work introduces a comprehensive machine learning classification framework applied to a large multi-survey dataset, including feature imputation for missing data and a detailed catalog of classified objects.
Findings
Classified ~90 million objects into stars, galaxies, and quasars.
Achieved high-confidence classifications with probabilities ≥ 0.7 and ≥ 0.9.
Provided detailed density maps of extragalactic objects across survey footprints.
Abstract
We present the second public data release (DR) of the VISTA EXtension to Auxiliary Surveys (VEXAS), where we classify objects into stars, galaxies and quasars based on an ensemble of machine learning algorithms. The aim of VEXAS is to build the widest multi-wavelength catalogue, providing reference magnitudes, colours and morphological information for a large number of scientific uses. We apply an ensemble of 32 different machine learning models, based on three different algorithms and on different magnitude sets, training samples and classification problems on the three VEXAS DR1 optical+infrared (IR) tables. The tables were created in DR1 cross-matching VISTA near-IR data with WISE far-IR data and with optical magnitudes from the Dark Energy Survey (VEXAS-DESW), the Sky Mapper Survey (VEXAS-SMW), and the PanSTARRS (VEXAS-PSW). We assemble a large table of spectroscopically confirmed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
