English

Two-Line Element Estimation Using Machine Learning

Space Physics 2019-06-04 v2

Abstract

Two-line elements are widely used for space operations to predict the orbit with a moderate accuracy for 2-3 days. Local optimization methods, such as the nonlinear least squares method with differential corrections, can estimate a TLE as long as there exists an initial estimate that provides the desired precision. Global optimization methods to estimate TLEs are computationally intensive, and estimating a large number of them is prohibitive. In this paper, the feasibility of estimating TLEs using machine learning methods is investigated. First, a Monte-Carlo approach to estimate a TLE, when there are no initial estimates that provide the desired precision, is introduced. The proposed Monte-Carlo method is shown to estimate TLEs with residual mean squared errors below 1 km for space objects with varying area-to-mass ratios and orbital characteristics. Second, gradient boosting decision trees and fully-connected neural networks are trained to map the orbital evolution of space objects to the associated TLEs using 8 million publicly available TLEs from the US space catalog. The desired precision in the mapping to estimate a TLE is achieved for one of the three test cases, which is a low area-to-mass ratio space object.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1902.04189,
  title  = {Two-Line Element Estimation Using Machine Learning},
  author = {Rasit Abay and Sudantha Balage and Melrose Brown and Russell Boyce},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1902.04189},
  year   = {2019}
}