Are we alone in the universe?
Scientists may have just moved us closer to answering this question. The team — led by researchers from the University of Toronto — has streamlined the search for extraterrestrial life by using a new algorithm to organize the data from their telescopes into categories, to distinguish between real signals and interference. This has allowed them to quickly sort through the information and find patterns, through an artificial intelligence process known as machine learning.
The quest to discover other advanced life in the universe involves locating technologically-generated signals — know as “technosignatures” — because it is assumed that an advanced extraterrestrial civilization would be sophisticated enough to emit these signals. Since the 1960s, astronomers working on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence (SETI) have used powerful radio telescopes to search thousands of stars and hundreds of galaxies for these technosignatures.
Even though the telescopes used for these searches are located in areas where there is minimal interference from technology like cell phones and TV stations, human disturbance still poses major challenges. "In many of our observations, there is a lot of interference,” says Peter Ma, a Faculty of Arts & Science undergraduate student and researcher. He’s also the first author on the research paper that reveals this latest technique, published today in Nature Astronomy. “We need to distinguish the exciting radio signals in space from the uninteresting radio signals from Earth.”
By simulating signals of both types, the team has trained their machine-learning tools to differentiate between extraterrestrial-like signals and human-generated interference. They compared a range of different machine-learning algorithms, studied their precision and false- positive rates, and then used that information to settle on a powerful algorithm, created by Ma, a member of Victoria College.
This new algorithm has resulted in the discovery of eight new radio signals that could potentially be transmissions from extraterrestrial intelligence. The eight signals came from five different stars, located 30 to 90 light years away from Earth. These signals were overlooked in a previous analysis of the same data, which did not use machine learning.
To the SETI team, these signals are considered notable for two reasons. “First,” explains Steve Croft, project scientist for Breakthrough Listen on the Green Bank Telescope, “they are present when we look at the star and absent when we look away — as opposed to local interference, which is generally always present. Second, the signals change in frequency over time in a way that makes them appear far from the telescope.”
Croft notes that it's important to realize that when you have a dataset containing millions of signals, occasionally signals can have the two characteristics he explains above — just by sheer chance. “It's a bit like walking across a gravel path and finding a stone stuck in the tread of your shoe that seems to fit perfectly.”
For this reason, even though the signals appear the way the team expects extraterrestrial signals to look, the researchers are not yet convinced that they are from extraterrestrial intelligence — at least until they see the same signal again. When brief follow-up observations were done using the Green Bank Radio Telescope, the patterns that could indicate extraterrestrial signals were not found. More observations and analyses are underway.
Ma refers to the algorithm that he created as a combination of two subtypes of machine learning — supervised learning and unsupervised learning. Called “semi-unsupervised learning,” his approach involves using supervised techniques to guide and train the algorithm in order to help it generalize, with unsupervised learning techniques, so that new hidden patterns can be more easily discovered in the data.
Ma first came up with the idea to apply this specific algorithm to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence in a Grade 12 computer science class. Unfortunately, the project confused his teachers, because they weren’t sure how it could be used.
“I only told my team after the paper’s publication that this all started as a high school project that wasn't really appreciated by my teachers.”
Cherry Ng, a research associate at the Faculty of Arts & Science's Dunlap Institute for Astronomy & Astrophysics and second author on the paper, says that new ideas are very important in a field like SETI. “By poking the data with every technique, we might be able to discover exciting signals.”
Ng, who has been working on this project with Ma since the summer of 2020, says machine learning is the way to go in the current era of big data astronomy. “I am impressed by how well this approach has performed on the search for extraterrestrial intelligence.”
“With the help of artificial intelligence, I’m optimistic that we’ll be able to better quantify the likelihood of the presence of extraterrestrial signals from other civilizations.”
Looking ahead, Ma, Ng, and the rest of the SETI team hope to expand on their new algorithm and apply it to other datasets and observatories.
Using powerful, multi-antenna radio telescopes like MeerKAT, the Square Kilometre Array, and the Next Generation VLA, Ma says the team plans to scale their machine learning approach in a major way.
“With our new technique, combined with the next generation of telescopes, we hope that machine learning can take us from searching hundreds of stars, to searching millions.”
The data used in this study come from the Green Bank Telescope in West Virginia, which is one of the major facilities involved in the Breakthrough Listen technosignature search project. The Breakthrough Listen Initiative, sponsored by the Breakthrough Prize Foundation, is the most powerful, comprehensive and intensive scientific search ever undertaken for signs of intelligent life beyond Earth.