SpectraNet: Learned Recognition of Artificial Satellites From High Contrast Spectroscopic Imagery

J. Zachary Gazak, Ian McQuaid, Ryan Swindle, Matthew Phelps, Justin Fletcher; Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision (WACV), 2022, pp. 4012-4020

Abstract


Effective space traffic management requires positive identification of artificial satellites. Current methods for extracting object identification from observed data require spatially resolved imagery which limits identification to objects in low earth orbits. Most artificial satellites, however, operate in geostationary orbits at distances which prohibit ground based observatories from resolving spatial information. This paper demonstrates an object identification solution leveraging modified residual convolutional neural networks to map distance-invariant spectroscopic data to object identity. We report classification accuracies exceeding 80% for a simulated 64-class satellite problem--even in the case of satellites undergoing constant, random re-orientation. An astronomical observing campaign driven by these results returned accuracies of 72% for a nine-class problem with an average of 100 examples per class, performing as expected from simulation. We demonstrate the application of variational Bayesian inference by dropout, stochastic weight averaging (SWA), and SWA-focused deep ensembling to measure classification uncertainties--critical components in space traffic management where routine decisions risk expensive space assets and carry geopolitical consequences.

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[bibtex]
@InProceedings{Gazak_2022_WACV, author = {Gazak, J. Zachary and McQuaid, Ian and Swindle, Ryan and Phelps, Matthew and Fletcher, Justin}, title = {SpectraNet: Learned Recognition of Artificial Satellites From High Contrast Spectroscopic Imagery}, booktitle = {Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Winter Conference on Applications of Computer Vision (WACV)}, month = {January}, year = {2022}, pages = {4012-4020} }