Abstract

In Mars exploration, hyper-spectrometry plays an important role due to its high spectral resolution. However, due to the technical difficulty and the data size, the spatial resolution or the coverage of hyperspectral data is often limited. This limitation can be alleviated by deep learning-based super-resolution (SR) reconstruction. But the spatial size and batch size of the input training data is limited due to the large number of spectral channels. To improve the efficiency of model training and SR reconstruction, a dataset based on CRISM hyperspectral data is created in this paper, and its redundancy is analyzed in both spectral and spatial spital dimensions. Compression algorithms based on data selection and PCA are used to reduce the size of the input training data. A network that can perform spatial SR and spectral enhancement is also proposed to make the network can be trained with the compressed data. With these compression algorithms and network, high-resolution data with 235 bands can be reconstructed from the low-resolution data with only 40 bands. Compared with the network trained on the original low-resolution data with 235 bands, the model training time and the SR reconstruction runtime can be reduced to 30% and 23% with practically no accuracy loss. The effectiveness of compression algorithms based on data selection also indicates that maybe not all the bands need to be transmitted from the Mars probes or be collected. Furthermore, it would, in principle, help improve the efficiency of satellite data transmission and simplify the design of the hyper-spectrometer. Additionally, a method for spatial dimension correlation evaluation is also proposed in this paper. The spatial compression shows that the proposed method can reflect the correlation of spatial texture between patches, and the model can be acceptably trained with only half of the original data.

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