IMLGIVSPFeb 27, 2023

Scalable precision wide-field imaging in radio interferometry: II. AIRI validated on ASKAP data

arXiv:2302.14149v210 citationsh-index: 35
AI Analysis

This work addresses imaging precision and speed in radio astronomy, offering incremental improvements over prior algorithms like uSARA and WSClean.

The paper validates the AIRI algorithm on ASKAP radio interferometry data, showing improvements in reconstructing diffuse components, more accurate spectral index maps, and a fourfold acceleration in deconvolution time compared to existing methods.

Accompanying Part I, this sequel delineates a validation of the recently proposed AI for Regularisation in radio-interferometric Imaging (AIRI) algorithm on observations from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP). The monochromatic AIRI-ASKAP images showcased in this work are formed using the same parallelised and automated imaging framework described in Part I: ``uSARA validated on ASKAP data''. Using a Plug-and-Play approach, AIRI differs from uSARA by substituting a trained denoising deep neural network (DNN) for the proximal operator in the regularisation step of the forward-backward algorithm during deconvolution. We build a trained shelf of DNN denoisers which target the estimated image-dynamic-ranges of our selected data. Furthermore, we quantify variations of AIRI reconstructions when selecting the nearest DNN on the shelf versus using a universal DNN with the highest dynamic range, opening the door to a more complete framework that not only delivers image estimation but also quantifies epistemic model uncertainty. We continue our comparative analysis of source structure, diffuse flux measurements, and spectral index maps of selected target sources as imaged by AIRI and the algorithms in Part I -- uSARA and WSClean. Overall we see an improvement over uSARA and WSClean in the reconstruction of diffuse components in AIRI images. The scientific potential delivered by AIRI is evident in further imaging precision, more accurate spectral index maps, and a significant acceleration in deconvolution time, whereby AIRI is four times faster than its sub-iterative sparsity-based counterpart uSARA.

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