Will an AI be the first to discover alien life?

#artificialintelligence 

The Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia is one of several helping to search for alien civilizations.Credit: Jim West/Alamy From the hills of West Virginia to the flats of rural Australia, some of the world's largest telescopes are listening for signals from distant alien civilizations. The search for extraterrestrial intelligence, known as SETI, is an effort to find artificial-looking electromagnetic radiation that might have come from a technologically advanced civilization in a far-away solar system. A study published today1 describes one of several efforts to use machine learning, a subset of artificial intelligence (AI), to help astronomers sift quickly through the reams of data such searches yield. As AI reshapes many scientific fields, what promise does it hold for the search for life beyond Earth? "It is a new era for SETI research that is opening up thanks to machine learning technology," says Franck Marchis, a planetary astronomer at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California.

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