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Matteo Paz | |
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Born | 2006 or 2007 |
Education | Pasadena High School |
Years active | 2022–present |
Known for | Developing an artificial intelligence model that identifies celestial objects |
Awards | Regeneron Science Talent Search (2025) |
Matteo Paz (born 2006 or 2007) is an American astronomer who developed an artificial intelligence model that identifies celestial objects.
Biography
Paz attended Pasadena High School in Pasadena, California. In the summer of 2022, he joined the California Institute of Technology's Planet Finder Academy, where he was mentored by J. Davy Kirkpatrick and Andrew Howard.[1][2]
Paz and Kirkpatrick analyzed NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer's dataset. Paz began building an AI model that could analyze the dataset and identify objects in space. In six weeks, the model was capable of identifying such objects. By 2024, it had flagged 1.5 million candidate objects.[1] In November 2024, he published his paper, A Submillisecond Fourier and Wavelet-based Model to Extract Variable Candidates from the NEOWISE Single-exposure Database, in The Astronomical Journal.[3]
In March 2025, Paz won first place in the Regeneron Science Talent Search for his AI model at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C., and received the $250,000 prize.[4]
In March 2025, he stated he had not committed to a school but was accepted early and leaning to attending Stanford University.[5] In an April 2025 Fox 11 Los Angeles interview, Paz stated that he was accepted to the California Institute of Technology, but wanted to move away from his hometown, and was considering attending Stanford University or the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[6]
Paz works at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center.[1]
Personal life
Paz enjoys snowboarding.[6]
Awards and honors
Bibliography
- A Submillisecond Fourier and Wavelet-based Model to Extract Variable Candidates from the NEOWISE Single-exposure Database (The Astronomical Journal, 2024). DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ad7fe6.[3]
References
- ^ a b c Tuhin, Muhammad (2025-04-11). "The High Schooler Who Found 1.5 Million Hidden Objects in Space: The Story of Matteo Paz and His Cosmic Algorithm". Science News Today. Retrieved 2025-06-28.
- ^ Bernard, Adrien (2025-04-16). "At 18, he discovers 1.5 million unknown celestial objects with his AI algorithm 🌟". Techno-Science.net. Retrieved 2025-06-28.
- ^ a b "Radware Bot Manager Captcha". validate.perfdrive.com. doi:10.3847/1538-3881/ad7fe6. Retrieved 2025-06-28.
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: CS1 maint: unflagged free DOI (link) - ^ "Regeneron Science Talent Search 2025 Awards More Than $1.8 Million to High School Seniors for Innovative Research on Classifying Celestial Objects, Treating a Rare Muscle Disease and Solving a Long-Standing Math Problem". Society for Science. 2025-03-11. Retrieved 2025-06-28.
- ^ KCAL News (2025-03-12). Pasadena High School student wins big in prestigious math and science competition. Retrieved 2025-06-28 – via YouTube.
- ^ a b FOX 11 Los Angeles (2025-04-14). Pasadena high schooler earns top science award. Retrieved 2025-06-28 – via YouTube.
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
- Pending AfC submissions
- Pending AfC submissions in article space
- AfC submissions by date/28 June 2025
- Living people
- 21st-century American astronomers
- American male snowboarders
- Artificial intelligence people
- California Institute of Technology faculty
- Pasadena High School (California) alumni
- People from Pasadena, California