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    Automatic Mapping of Small Lunar Impact Craters Using LRO-NAC Images

    94154.pdf (2.873Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Fairweather, John
    Lagain, Anthony
    Servis, K.
    Benedix, Gretchen
    Kumar, S.S.
    Bland, Phil
    Date
    2022
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Fairweather, J.H. and Lagain, A. and Servis, K. and Benedix, G.K. and Kumar, S.S. and Bland, P.A. 2022. Automatic Mapping of Small Lunar Impact Craters Using LRO-NAC Images. Earth and Space Science. 9 (7): ARTN e2021EA002177.
    Source Title
    Earth and Space Science
    DOI
    10.1029/2021EA002177
    Faculty
    Faculty of Science and Engineering
    Research Excellence
    School
    School of Earth and Planetary Sciences (EPS)
    Research Excellence
    Funding and Sponsorship
    http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/DP210100336
    http://purl.org/au-research/grants/arc/FT170100024
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/94370
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Impact craters are the most common feature on the Moon’s surface. Crater size–frequency distributions provide critical insight into the timing of geological events, surface erosion rates, and impact fluxes. The impact crater size–frequency follows a power law (meter-sized craters are a few orders of magnitude more numerous than kilometric ones), making it tedious to manually measure all the craters within an area to the smallest sizes. We can bridge this gap by using a machine learning algorithm. We adapted a Crater Detection Algorithm to work on the highest resolution lunar image data set (Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter-Narrow-Angle Camera [NAC] images). We describe the retraining and application of the detection model to preprocessed NAC images and discussed the accuracy of the resulting crater detections. We evaluated the model by assessing the results across six NAC images, each covering a different lunar area at differing lighting conditions. We present the model’s average true positive rate for small impact craters (down to 20 m in diameter) is 93%. The model does display a 15% overestimation in calculated crater diameters. The presented crater detection model shows acceptable performance on NAC images with incidence angles ranging between ∼50° and ∼70° and can be applied to many lunar sites independent to morphology.

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