AI first found craters on Mars

NASA has unveiled images of the first-ever craters on Mars discovered by AI.The system found craters,

by scanning photos aboard NASA's Reconnaissance orbiter, which was launched in 2005 to study the water on the red planet.

The detected cluster appeared as a resulthit by several fragments of a single meteor, which shattered into pieces during flight across the sky between March 2010 and May 2012. The debris landed in an area called Noctis Fossae, a long, narrow and shallow depression on Mars. They left behind a series of craters covering about 30 m of the planet's surface.

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Scientists usually looked for these craters by scanningimages independently, and without the use of any devices. The system takes low-resolution images of the planet covering several kilometers at a time, and it takes a researcher about 40 minutes to study a single image.

To save time and increase the quantityFuture Findings, scientists and AI researchers at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California have developed a tool they dubbed "an automatic new crater classifier."

They trained the classifier by loading 6830 into itimages taken with the context camera. This dataset contained several previously confirmed craters, as well as images without them to show the system where it shouldn't focus.

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