How astrophysics and machine learning took Michele Sasdelli from Germany to England to NASA to Adelaide

Michele Sasdelli

Dr Michele Sasdelli, Post-Doctoral Researcher at the 最新糖心Vlogn Institute for Machine Learning

Story written by Dr Sarah Keenihan, AIML

One of the problems with space junk is that it鈥檚 really hard to keep track of. 

Yes sure, it鈥檚 orbiting around our planet. 

鈥淏ut objects don鈥檛 tend to stay in a fixed position above the Earth,鈥 says Dr Michele (Mike) Sasdelli, Post-Doctoral Researcher at the 最新糖心Vlogn Institute for Machine Learning (AIML), at the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide.

鈥淎nd even if you can see an object鈥檚 trajectory for a brief period, that鈥檚 not enough to be able to track it accurately over a long time.鈥 

Mike is working on a research project where he models how objects move in Earth鈥檚 orbit. 

He hopes to be able to better predict the movement of space junk so we can avoid collisions of items in space (there was a  in 2020), or anticipate when junk falls back to Earth (like the Chinese space station ). 

There are estimated to be thousands of junk items in space, and over a million if you include the pieces smaller than 1cm in size. 

Looking for planets 

This project is not Mike鈥檚 first in the realm of space. 

Prior to commencing at AIML, he spent three months working at NASA with other machine learning and astronomy experts. He was engaged through the , which applies AI technologies to scientific research and solving human problems. 

鈥淲e were developing algorithms to detect exoplanets,鈥 Mike said. 鈥淭he data we used came from the , which is so sensitive it can detect subtle changes in the brightness of stars due to a planet passing in front them.鈥  

TESS is short for Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite. Exoplanets are planets that orbit stars outside of our solar system, and some could theoretically support life. 

鈥淲e published a couple of papers based on our work,鈥 said Mike. 鈥淎nd now other scientists are building up these ideas further.鈥 

Frontier Development Lab has published a  that summarises this project. 

Theory of learning

After growing up in Italy, Mike completed an astrophysics PhD in Germany. 

鈥淏ut since then I鈥檝e moved more into machine learning, and spent less time in physics,鈥 he said.  

After graduating, Mike spent several years working in UK computer vision company Cortexica, which is now part of . 

He then came to AIML in Adelaide, with his stint at NASA on the way. 

The majority of Mike鈥檚 current research activities focus on deep learning, and theory of learning. 

Deep learning is a kind of artificial intelligence (AI) that mimics some of the features of the human brain to detect objects, recognize speech, translate languages and make decisions. It is able to learn from different kinds of data, and without human supervision. 

鈥淩ight now we have complicated AI systems that are able to learn quite detailed tasks, but actually we don鈥檛 always know exactly how they manage to do this,鈥 Mike says. 

鈥淚 want to have a greater understanding of how deep learning actually works.鈥 

鈥淥nce we understand is better, we can make improvements in deep learning systems to improve computer vision, 鈥榮elf-driving鈥 car technology, language recognition and more,鈥 adds Mike. 

Tagged in space, space machine learning