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An SOM-Hybrid Supervised Model for the Prediction of Underlying Physical Parameters from Near-Infrared Planetary Spectra
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An SOM-Hybrid Supervised Model for the Prediction of Underlying Physical Parameters from Near-Infrared Planetary Spectra
Lili Zhang18 , Erzsébet Merényi19 , William M. Grundy20 and Eliot F. Young21
| (18) |
Rice Quantum Institute and Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering MS-366, Rice University, 6100 Main Street, Houston, TX 77005, |
| (19) |
Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering MS-380, Rice University, 6100 Main Street, Houston, TX 77005, |
| (20) |
Lowell Observatory, 1400 W. Mars Hill Rd., Flagstaff, AZ 86001, |
| (21) |
Space Studies Department, Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, CO 80302, |
Abstract
Near-Infrared reflectance spectra of planets can be used to infer surface parameters, sometimes with relevance to recent geologic
history. Accurate prediction of parameters (such as composition, temperature, grain size, crystalline state, and dilution
of one species within another) is often difficult because parameters manifest subtle but significant details in noisy spectral
observations, because diverse parameters may produce similar spectral signatures, and because of the high dimensionality of
the feature vectors (spectra). These challenges are often unmet by traditional inference methods. We retrieve two underlying
causes of the spectral shapes, temperature and grain size, with an SOM-hybrid supervised neural prediction model. We achieve
83.0±2.7% and 100.0±0.0% prediction accuracy for temperature and grain size, respectively. The key to these high accuracies
is the exploitation of an interesting antagonistic relationship between the nature of the physical parameters, and the learning
mode of the SOM in the neural model.
Keywords Self-Organizing Map - parameter prediction - Near-Infrared spectra - New Horizons Space Mission - Pluto-Charon system
This work was partially supported by grants NNG05GA63G and NNG05GA94G from the Applied Information Systems Research Program,
NASA, Science Mission Directorate. Figures are in color, request color copy by email: llzhang@rice.edu, erzsebet@rice.edu
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