NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Compressive Sensing Application for Transient Photometric MeasurementsCompressive Sensing (CS) is a mathematical theory for simultaneous data acquisition and compression. Natural phenomena may be sparse in some physical or temporal domain. If we exploit this sparsity by applying the technique of CS to obtain information, how do our measurements change as a function of domain and measurement systematics? What are the specific implications for the science and for the sensing infrastructure?
In this talk, we will discuss the generalized systematic effects consequent to the application of CS to time-series photometric measurements. We assess implications for observability, sparsification, and information loss in the detection, retrieval and reconstruction process.
To study time-series photometry, we explore the field of gravitational microlensing. A source star, typically in the galactic bulge, gets microlensed when there is a precise alignment of a lensing star and its planetary system, with the source star. The microlensed source star changes in flux magnification as the lensing system crosses the precise path of alignment, resulting in a microlensing curve in time domain. A high-cadence, high-resolution system, which uses low power and bandwidth is essential to obtain valuable science measurements. Hence, we discuss application of CS to gravitational microlensing data sets, which in turn can be generalized to any time-ordered photometric measurements.
Document ID
20210019106
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Asmita Abhay Korde
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
July 23, 2021
Subject Category
Optics
Meeting Information
Meeting: DSP Online Conference
Location: Virtual
Country: US
Start Date: October 4, 2021
End Date: October 8, 2021
Sponsors: DSP related, Beningo Embedded Group
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 981698.01.02.51.03.10.15
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
No Preview Available