Connecting Meteorite Spectra to Lunar Surface Composition Using Hyperspectral Imaging and Machine Learning
This work addresses the challenge of cost-effective lunar composition analysis for planetary scientists, though it is incremental as it builds on existing hyperspectral and ML methods.
The study tackled the problem of mapping lunar surface mineralogy by integrating hyperspectral imaging of a meteorite with ground-based lunar data and machine learning, achieving 93.7% classification accuracy for olivine and pyroxene and 88% accuracy in clustering lunar mineralogical data.
We present an innovative, cost-effective framework integrating laboratory Hyperspectral Imaging (HSI) of the Bechar010 Lunar meteorite with ground-based lunar HSI and supervised Machine Learning(ML) to generate high-fidelity mineralogical maps. A 3mm thin section of Bechar010 was imaged under a microscope with a 30mm focal length lens at 150mm working distance, using 6x binning to increase the signal-to-noise ratio, producing a data cube (X $\times$ Y $\times$ $λ$ = $791 \times 1024 \times 224$, 0.24mm $\times$ 0.2mm resolution) across 400-1000}nm (224 bands, 2.7nm spectral sampling, 5.5nm full width at half maximum spectral resolution) using a Specim FX10 camera. Ground-based lunar HSI was captured with a Celestron 8SE telescope (3km/pixel), yielded a data cube ($371 \times 1024 \times 224$). Solar calibration was performed using a Spectralon reference ({99}\% reflectance {<2}\% error) ensured accurate reflectance spectra. A Support Vector Machine (SVM) with a radial basis function kernel, trained on expert-labeled spectra, achieved {93.7}\% classification accuracy(5-fold cross-validation) for olivine ({92}\% precision, {90}\% recall) and pyroxene ({88}\% precision, {86}{\%} recall) in Bechar 010. LIME analysis identified key wavelengths (e.g., 485nm, {22.4}\% for M3; 715nm, {20.6}\% for M6) across 10 pre-selected regions (M1 to M10), indicating olivine-rich (Highland-like) and pyroxene-rich (Mare-like) compositions. SAM analysis revealed angles from 0.26 radian to 0.66 radian, linking M3 and M9 to Highlands and M6 and M10 to Mares. K-means clustering of Lunar data identified 10 mineralogical clusters ({88}\% accuracy), validated against Chandrayaan-1 Moon mineralogy Mapper ($\rm M^3$) data (140m/pixel, 10nm spectral resolution).A novel push-broom HSI approach with a telescope achieves 0.8 arcsec resolution for lunar spectroscopy, inspiring full-sky multi-object spectral mapping.