Classification of a black hole spin out of its shadow using support vector machines

2019 
We use Support Vector Machines (SVMs) to classify the spin of a black hole. The SVMs are trained and tested with a catalog of numerically generated images of black holes, assuming disk and spherical matter models with monochromatic emission with wavelength of 4mm. We determine the accuracy of the SVM to classify the spin in terms of the image resolution, for which we consider three resolutions of $16^2,~32^2$ and $64^2$ pixels. Our approach is applied to the specific mass of the Supermassive Black Hole (SMBH) at the center of the Milky Way. Our findings are that when the distribution is a thin disk, the accuracy in the classification resists even the coarsest resolution with accuracy over 90\%, whereas for the spherical distribution it drops below 80\% for low and intermediate resolutions. The results show how the distribution of matter, the angle of vision and the image resolution influence the ease to determine the black hole spin.
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