NASA Logo

NTRS

NTRS - NASA Technical Reports Server

Back to Results
Creation and testing of an artificial neural network based carbonate detector for Mars roversWe have developed an artificial neural network (ANN) based carbonate detector capable of running on current and future rover hardware. The detector can identify calcite in visible/NIR (350-2500 nm) spectra of both laboratory specimens covered by ferric dust and rocks in Mars analogue field environments. The ANN was trained using the Backpropagation algorithm with sigmoid activation neurons. For the training dataset, we chose nine carbonate and eight non-carbonate representative mineral spectra from the USGS spectral library. Using these spectra as seeds, we generated 10,000 variants with up to 2% Gaussian noise in each reflectance measurement. We cross-validated several ANN architectures, training on 9,900 spectra and testing on the remaining 100. The best performing ANN correctly detected, with perfect accuracy, the presence (or absence) of carbonate in spectral data taken on field samples from the Mojave desert and clean, pure marbles from CT. Sensitivity experiments with JSC Mars-1 simulant dust suggest the carbonate detector would perform well in aeolian Martian environments.
Document ID
20060042657
Acquisition Source
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Document Type
Conference Paper
External Source(s)
Authors
Bornstein, Benjamin
Castano, Rebecca
Gilmore, Martha S.
Merrill, Matthew
Greenwood, James P.
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
March 7, 2005
Subject Category
Lunar And Planetary Science And Exploration
Meeting Information
Meeting: IEEE Aerospace Conference
Location: Big Sky, MT
Country: United States
Start Date: March 7, 2005
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other
Keywords
neural networks
carbonates

Available Downloads

There are no available downloads for this record.
No Preview Available