Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Niihara Takafumi
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code B000307001
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Reflectance spectra of Asteroids and Meteorites: Their classifications and statistical comparisons

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Hideaki Miyamoto
Peng K. Hong
Takafumi Niihara
Takeshi Kuritani
Kenji Fukumizu
Hideitsu Hino
Kenji Nagata
Shotaro Akaho
J. Alexis P Rodriguez
Hemmi Ryodo
Seiji Sugita
Masato Okada

Summary

© Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd. Asteroids have been observed both from the ground and through space missions for decades, which accumulated large amount of their observational data. These data are used to estimate the sizes, orbits, and even possible chemical compositions of asteroids. Even though the chemical composition is generally difficult to be accurately determined without a sample return or in-situ observation by a spacecraft, asteroids are classified based on their reflectance spectra, which are compared with those of meteorites, which are known to be mostly originated from asteroids. This scheme works reasonably well for some asteroid types, but others, mostly featureless ones in reflectance spectra, remained controversial due to the fact that the observational data of asteroids and measured data of meteorites are different in terms of the data coverage, precision and resolution. Our aim is to connect asteroids with meteorites based on sparse modelling in order to search for the optimal integration scheme for two different databases without relying on preliminary knowledge. For the above purpose, we develop large databases of asteroids and meteorites for easy application of sparse modelling. Through our analyses including principal component analysis, Bayesian spectral deconvolution and dimensionality reduction, we found that our data-driven approach can extract potential information without using empirical knowledge. Our methods show a new type of data handling scheme for asteroid and meteorite data, potentially having a significant contribution for future missions.

Magazine(name)

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

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Volume

1036

Number Of Pages

1

StartingPage

012003

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Date of Issue

2018-06-27

Referee

Exist

Invited

Not exist

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (proceedings of international meetings)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1088/1742-6596/1036/1/012003

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PMID

 

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arXiv ID

 

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