AI Neural Network Can Map Icebergs 10,000 Times Faster Than Humans

AI Neural Network Can Map Icebergs 10,000 Times Faster Than Humans

AI Neural Network Map Icebergs
University of Leeds researchers have introduced a neural network that can quickly and accurately chart large Antarctic icebergs in satellite images in a mere 0.01 seconds, making it 10,000 times faster than human efforts. Icebergs captured by the Sentinel-1 satellite appear as bright objects against the darker ocean and sea-ice background.

This neural network excels in mapping icebergs even in challenging conditions like when smaller iceberg fragments make them easily grouped together with the main iceberg by mistake. The neural networks’ ability to understand intricate non-linear relationships and take the whole image context into account make this a non-issue. Plus, it was trained using Sentinel-1 images exhibiting giant icebergs in different settings, with manually-derived outlines serving as the target.

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Satellites are, of course, essential for monitoring changes and understanding processes occurring far from civilization. This new neural network automates what would otherwise be a manual and labor-intensive task of locating and reporting iceberg extent,” said Mark Drinkwater, ESA’s GOCE Mission Scientist.

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Jackson Chung

A technology, gadget and video game enthusiast that loves covering the latest industry news. Favorite trade show? Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.

Work Begins on NASA’s SPHEREx Space Telescope, Will Map Universe Like Never Before

Work Begins on NASA’s SPHEREx Space Telescope, Will Map Universe Like Never Before

NASA SPHEREx Space Telescope Map Universe
Work begins on NASA’s SPHEREx (Specto-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization, and Ices Explorer) space telescope and once completed, it will stand nearly 8.5 feet tall (2.6 meters). Cone-shaped photon shields, which are being assembled in a clean room at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, give SPHEREx its distinctive shape.



Three nested cones surround SPHEREx’s telescope to protect it from the light as well as heat of the Sun and Earth.To complete two all-sky maps every year, the spacecraft will sweep over every section of the sky, similar to scanning the inside of a globe. A launch is planned for no later than April 2025 and the mission is set to measure the abundance of water ice in interstellar clouds of gas and dust, where new stars are born, to help scientists better understand where the key ingredients necessary for life originated.

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We’re not just concerned with how cold SPHEREx is, but also that its temperature stays the same. If the temperature varies, it could change the sensitivity of the detector, which could translate as a false signal,” said Konstantin Penanen, JPL’s Payload Manager for the mission.

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Author
Jackson Chung

A technology, gadget and video game enthusiast that loves covering the latest industry news. Favorite trade show? Mobile World Congress in Barcelona.