管家婆免费开奖大全

鈥楽omething out there鈥: How a 管家婆免费开奖大全 undergrad uses AI to search for aliens

Peter Ma wrote an algorithm to detect signs of extraterrestrial life while still in high school
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Peter Ma, who is entering his fourth year of study in 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 Faculty of Arts & Science, was the lead author on a paper published in Nature Astronomy earlier this year (photo by Johnny Guatto)

Is there life beyond our planet? It鈥檚 a question that third-year 管家婆免费开奖大全 undergraduate student began thinking about when he was still in high school.

A math and physics student entering his fourth year in the Faculty of Arts & Science, Ma is dedicated to searching for aliens 鈥 and while that may sound like something out of science fiction, he isn鈥檛 exactly chasing down little green men. Instead, he鈥檚 drawing on his passion for science to find the data that could prove we鈥檙e not alone in the universe.

Ma was in Grade 12 when he wrote an algorithm to look for signs of intelligent life using open-source data from the University of California, Berkeley and its research program.

After cold-emailing researchers at the , he became the youngest member of the team of international researchers at UC Berkeley dedicated to the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, and was lead author on a in the journal Nature Astronomy.

鈥淚 was super-curious even as a really young kid,鈥 says Ma, who grew up in a Chinese-speaking household and learned English by reading books borrowed during visits to the local library.

鈥淚 remember asking my parents questions about everything as early as age four 鈥 and they didn鈥檛 really know how to answer most of them.鈥

Ma recalls getting a telescope at age six, and frequent trips to Home Depot and Walmart to buy supplies for his many 鈥渙n steroids鈥 science projects. One such challenge to build a working chair for the school principal out of recycled materials found Ma toying with the idea of melting aluminum cans 鈥 until he realized it was 鈥減robably not a good idea to build a furnace in the backyard.鈥

In high school, he taught himself Grade 11 computer science in three weeks, spending the remainder of the semester devouring videos on machine learning and deep learning 鈥 eventually developing his space-scanning algorithm using Breakthrough Listen鈥檚 open-source data.

鈥淚 was looking for interesting problems to solve,鈥 he says, recalling how his high school teachers were more perplexed than impressed with his AI exploits.

Even while stuck at home during the pandemic, Ma managed to maintain that momentum, working with SETI in the summer before starting university as a member of Victoria College. Once his classes were underway, he continued the collaboration with the support of the .

Using his algorithm, Ma and the SETI team detected eight radio signals that may have originated from life on another planet 鈥 when he relayed the findings to his 管家婆免费开奖大全 supervisors, he was surprised to hear them suggest the study could be published.

鈥淲hen they said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to send this to Nature Astronomy,鈥 I thought, 鈥榃ow, hold on 鈥 I鈥檓 not ready for papers.鈥 Usually those are done by actual researchers 鈥 in comparison to them, I鈥檓 still learning my ABCs.鈥

Ma stresses that when SETI refers to signals coming from an alien civilization, they aren鈥檛 necessarily talking about the big-eyed creatures we see in movies 鈥 but rather signs that point to some kind of life well beyond our own planet.

鈥淲e obviously can't search for intelligence per se 鈥 we search for proxies of the targets. So, we search for signs of engineering 鈥 in this case, engineering of radio technosignatures, or radio emissions. We believe that intelligent species can produce technology 鈥 a phone or a telescope or something like that 鈥 and we detect those kinds of signals.鈥

Ma credits his 管家婆免费开奖大全 supervisors and collaborators 鈥 in particular study co-author , a former research associate at the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, jointly affiliated with SETI, who is now an astronomer at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in France; and , director of the Dunlap Institute and professor in the 鈥 for preparing him to work alongside veteran researchers in the field.

鈥淧eter is self-motivated and not afraid of challenges,鈥 says Ng, who began working with Ma in the summer of 2020 to search for technosignatures using the Green Bank Telescope based in West Virginia.

鈥淲hen we get stuck on the analysis, instead of giving up, Peter would always come up with new ideas to try again. It鈥檚 his determination that sets him apart.鈥

Ma and the SETI team plan to continue their work with a two-year project that will scan up to one million stars (Ma鈥檚 paper, by contrast, looked at just 820 stars) using a set of 64 telescopes in South Africa.

Ma will have graduated from 管家婆免费开奖大全 by the time the project wraps up, but unsurprisingly plans to continue his scientific exploration as a graduate student.

鈥淭here has never been a better time in history to find extraterrestrial life now and in the future 鈥 our probability of actually finding them only goes up from here,鈥 says Ma, who is spending his summer working with the experimental particle physics group at McGill University on a joint project , the Swiss-based organization that developed the Large Hadron Collider.

鈥淚f you truly believe that we鈥檙e alone here [in the universe], then that鈥檚 a different story. But if you believe that there鈥檚 something out there, then it鈥檚 only a matter of time until we actually find it.鈥

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