New AI tech finds over 6K new craters on Moon


Toronto, March 17 (IANS): A new artificial intelligence (AI)-based lunar mapping technology has accurately mapped over 6,000 new craters on Earth's moon in just hours, the media reported.

The moon is dotted with a vast number of craters, some billions of years old.

Using the new lunar mapping technique, the technology successfully counted new pockmarks on the moon -- some 6,000 of them -- through available datasets from previous lunar observation information, Tech Times reported.

"Basically, we need to manually look at an image, locate and count the craters and then calculate how large they are based on the size of the image," Mohamad Ali-Dib, from the Centre for Planetary Sciences at University of Toronto Scarborough, Canada, was quoted as saying.

For the study, published in the journal Icarus, the team first trained the convolutional neural network on a dataset covering two-thirds of the moon. They then tested the neural network on the remaining third of the moon.

The results yield 92 per cent of craters from human-generated test sets and almost twice of the total number of crater detections.

They were able to spot about 6,000 previously unidentified craters on the moon's surface.

Out of the new craters discovered, 15 per cent are smaller in diameter than the minimum crater size in the ground-truth dataset.

The errors compared to the human-generated datasets are only 11 per cent or less, making the deep-learning tool useful in automatically extracting crater information on various solar system bodies.

The same network also successfully detected craters on Mercury, which has a completely distinct surface compared to the moon, the report said.

  

Top Stories


Leave a Comment

Title: New AI tech finds over 6K new craters on Moon



You have 2000 characters left.

Disclaimer:

Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that sending false messages to insult, defame, intimidate, mislead or deceive people or to intentionally cause public disorder is punishable under law. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.