{"PlanS_conform":"1","publisher":"IOP Publishing","status":"public","volume":994,"has_accepted_license":"1","date_updated":"2026-02-17T12:33:19Z","arxiv":1,"OA_place":"publisher","day":"19","intvolume":" 994","type":"journal_article","department":[{"_id":"AlBr"}],"oa":1,"title":"Machine Learning inference of stellar properties using integrated photometric and spectroscopic data","external_id":{"arxiv":["2507.10666"]},"date_published":"2025-11-19T00:00:00Z","article_number":"110","author":[{"last_name":"Kamai","full_name":"Kamai, Ilay","first_name":"Ilay"},{"id":"58f3726e-7cba-11ef-ad8b-e6e8cb3904e6","last_name":"Bronstein","full_name":"Bronstein, Alexander","orcid":"0000-0001-9699-8730","first_name":"Alexander"},{"first_name":"Hagai B.","full_name":"Perets, Hagai B.","last_name":"Perets"}],"month":"11","oa_version":"Published Version","article_type":"original","article_processing_charge":"Yes","quality_controlled":"1","file_date_updated":"2026-02-17T12:32:18Z","citation":{"ista":"Kamai I, Bronstein AM, Perets HB. 2025. Machine Learning inference of stellar properties using integrated photometric and spectroscopic data. The Astrophysical Journal. 994, 110.","chicago":"Kamai, Ilay, Alex M. Bronstein, and Hagai B. Perets. “Machine Learning Inference of Stellar Properties Using Integrated Photometric and Spectroscopic Data.” The Astrophysical Journal. IOP Publishing, 2025. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ae0cbc.","short":"I. Kamai, A.M. Bronstein, H.B. Perets, The Astrophysical Journal 994 (2025).","apa":"Kamai, I., Bronstein, A. M., & Perets, H. B. (2025). Machine Learning inference of stellar properties using integrated photometric and spectroscopic data. The Astrophysical Journal. IOP Publishing. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ae0cbc","mla":"Kamai, Ilay, et al. “Machine Learning Inference of Stellar Properties Using Integrated Photometric and Spectroscopic Data.” The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 994, 110, IOP Publishing, 2025, doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ae0cbc.","ama":"Kamai I, Bronstein AM, Perets HB. Machine Learning inference of stellar properties using integrated photometric and spectroscopic data. The Astrophysical Journal. 2025;994. doi:10.3847/1538-4357/ae0cbc","ieee":"I. Kamai, A. M. Bronstein, and H. B. Perets, “Machine Learning inference of stellar properties using integrated photometric and spectroscopic data,” The Astrophysical Journal, vol. 994. IOP Publishing, 2025."},"ddc":["520","000"],"DOAJ_listed":"1","abstract":[{"lang":"eng","text":"Stellar astrophysics relies on diverse observational modalities—primarily photometric light curves and spectroscopic data—from which fundamental stellar properties are inferred. While machine learning (ML) has advanced analysis within individual modalities, the complementary information encoded across modalities remains largely underexploited. We present the dual embedding for stellar astronomy (DESA) model, a novel multimodal foundation model that integrates light curves and spectra to learn a unified, physically meaningful latent space for stars. DESA first trains separate modality-specific encoders using a hybrid supervised/self-supervised scheme, and then aligns them through DualFormer, a transformer-based cross-modal integration module tailored for astrophysical data. DualFormer combines cross- and self-attention, a novel dual-projection alignment loss, and a projection-space eigendecomposition that yields physically structured embeddings. We demonstrate that DESA significantly outperforms leading unimodal and self-supervised baselines across a range of tasks. In zero- and few-shot settings, DESA’s learned representations recover stellar color–magnitude and Hertzsprung–Russell diagrams with high fidelity (R2 = 0.92 for photometric regressions). In full fine-tuning, DESA achieves state-of-the-art accuracy for binary star detection (AUC = 0.99, AP = 1.00) and stellar age prediction (RMSE = 0.94 Gyr). As a compelling case, DESA naturally separates synchronized binaries from young stars—two populations with nearly identical light curves—purely from their embedded positions in UMAP space, without requiring external kinematic or luminosity information. DESA thus offers a powerful new framework for multimodal, data-driven stellar population analysis, enabling both accurate prediction and novel discovery."}],"year":"2025","tmp":{"name":"Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Public License (CC-BY 4.0)","short":"CC BY (4.0)","legal_code_url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/legalcode","image":"/images/cc_by.png"},"publication_identifier":{"issn":["0004-637X"],"eissn":["1538-4357"]},"user_id":"2DF688A6-F248-11E8-B48F-1D18A9856A87","doi":"10.3847/1538-4357/ae0cbc","language":[{"iso":"eng"}],"acknowledgement":"This research was partially supported by the Israeli Science Foundation grant 1834/24.","publication_status":"published","OA_type":"gold","date_created":"2026-02-16T15:35:29Z","_id":"21246","file":[{"access_level":"open_access","creator":"dernst","file_size":16415089,"content_type":"application/pdf","date_updated":"2026-02-17T12:32:18Z","file_name":"2025_AstrophysicalJournal_Kamai.pdf","relation":"main_file","file_id":"21302","success":1,"date_created":"2026-02-17T12:32:18Z","checksum":"255ffd6d664e6c2d1cffbaced650bd10"}],"publication":"The Astrophysical Journal"}