Archive for the ‘alien life’ category: Page 34
Mar 8, 2023
AI Hunt For Extraterrestrial Intelligence Finds 8 Promising Signals
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: alien life, robotics/AI
Machine intelligence is helping astronomers analyse vast datasets from radio telescopes — and finding previously unseen signals of interest.
Mar 8, 2023
Book review: Believing in Dawkins
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: alien life, computing, employment
Among “the jobs once done by God [that] can be done by natural entities” there is life after death. Dawkins “frequently affirms that there is no life after death”, but Steinhart shows that this is inconsistent with Dawkins’ own convictions. Dawkins “should have argued that false religious theories of life after death can be replaced with more plausible scientific theories of life after death” [**].
Steinhart describes two plausible scientific theories of life after death: promotion to the higher level of reality of the simulators, and revisions of entire lives in new universes, each better than the previous life and universe. Worth noting, promotion could preserve memories and implement “the ancient idea of the resurrection of the body.” These theories of life after death are only sketched in this book, see Steinhart’s previous book “Your Digital Afterlives: Computational Theories of Life after Death” for more. See also my review of “Your Digital Afterlives” in “Tales of the Turing Church” (Chapter 12).
In summary, Steinhart builds a thorough and philosophically consistent spiritual naturalism, inspired by Dawkins, which offers the main mental benefits of religion. I like (actually I love) philosophy, but I try to keep mine as simple and working-class as possible, because many people don’t have the patience (or the time) for too much philosophical sophistication. I think the two approaches are complementary. So I use the term “religion” for the spiritual naturalism of Dawkins and Steinhart, and I use the simple term “God” now and then.
Mar 8, 2023
A radical new theory about the origin of the universe may help explain our existence
Posted by Dan Breeden in categories: alien life, physics
The deeper you get into physics, the simpler it becomes. The starting point of this wonderful book about Stephen Hawking’s ‘biggest legacy’ (which no one outside of physics has heard of) is the problem of our insignificance. Make a change in almost any of the slippery, basic physical properties of the universe and we’re toast – life would not be possible. If, for example, the universe had expanded even slightly more slowly than it did after the Big Bang it would have collapsed in on itself. Result? No us. A fraction faster and no galaxies would form, let alone habitable planets. In the incandescent beginning of the universe, each of these basic physical properties was as vacillating as a dream: they could have ended up being pretty much anything. How did they all, so sweetly, settle on the minuscule range of values that brought about us?
One answer is to say God did it. He deliberately selected our universe (and not one of the overwhelmingly more probable alternatives) to go forth and be fecund. Another suggestion is that all the possible universes that could exist do exist, now, at the same time – trillions and trillions of them, humming about like bees – and we’re just in one of the ones we could be in. This idea is called the multiverse. In a multiverse there’s nothing special about the incredible unlikeliness of being. Leibnitz came up with the proposal first, adding piously that God has placed us in the best universe of all possible universes. People have been making fun of that since Voltaire. Another idea is that new ‘worlds’ are being created endlessly, all equally real. Every time you make a cup of coffee, a multiplicity of alternative worlds splits off in which you made it with more milk, or added honey instead of sugar, or the coffee machine exploded and you didn’t make it at all.
Mar 7, 2023
Is There Life on Mars? Artificial Intelligence Could Help Uncover Alien Life on Mars and Beyond
Posted by Jose Ruben Rodriguez Fuentes in categories: alien life, robotics/AI
Summary: Scientists have developed a way to use artificial intelligence (AI) to find signs of life on other planets. They combined statistical ecology and machine learning to map the patterns and rules of how life survives in harsh environments on Earth, and then trained the AI to recognize those same patterns and rules in data from other planets. This method can help guide rovers and other exploration missions to places with the highest probability of containing life.
Source: SETI Institute.
Wouldn’t finding life on other worlds be easier if we knew exactly where to look? Researchers have limited opportunities to collect samples on Mars or elsewhere or access remote sensing instruments when hunting for life beyond Earth.
Mar 7, 2023
New AI tool can aid scientists in hunting for life on Mars
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: alien life, chemistry, robotics/AI
The development represents “an important advance in extraterrestrial research, in which biology has often lagged behind chemistry and geology.”
A new study has revealed a new way to enhance the search for aliens on Mars by teaching artificial intelligence to detect sites that could contain “biosignatures.”
And so, the researchers trained a deep learning framework to map biosignatures in a three-square-kilometer area of Chile’s Atacama Desert… More.
Continue reading “New AI tool can aid scientists in hunting for life on Mars” »
Mar 7, 2023
Engineers develop robots to house-hunt and scout real estate in space
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: alien life, robotics/AI, transportation
The robots contain miniaturized sensors which are deployed as they traverse a cave or other subsurface environment.
Life on Mars is closer than you think. And researchers at the University of Arizona College of Engineering are already scouting real estate and house hunting. Their helpers? A flock of robots that can explore the subsurface environments on other worlds.
“Lava tubes and caves would make perfect habitats for astronauts because you don’t have to build a structure; you are shielded from harmful cosmic radiation, so all you need to do is make it pretty and cozy,” said Wolfgang Fink, an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at UArizona.
Continue reading “Engineers develop robots to house-hunt and scout real estate in space” »
Mar 7, 2023
Life may not have been possible on Earth without Jupiter
Posted by Gemechu Taye in categories: alien life, evolution
New simulations paint a picture of our solar system resembling an ornate clock. “Throw more gears into the mix and it all breaks.”
A new experiment shed new light on the role Jupiter has played in the evolution of life on Earth. In a series of simulations, scientists showed that an Earth-like planet orbiting between Mars and Jupiter would be able to alter Earth’s orbit and push it out of the solar system.
Such an event would extricate Earth from its life support system, the Sun, and would therefore wipe out all life on our planet.
Continue reading “Life may not have been possible on Earth without Jupiter” »
Mar 7, 2023
Our Solar System Is The Rarest Kind In The Milky Way, Say Scientists
Posted by Paul Battista in category: alien life
To us everything seems normal. Our planet, blue and bursting with life, sits in the middle of the “habitable zone” around the Sun, with burning hot Venus inwards and lifeless Mars beyond. Giant gas planets exist way farther out. That’s as how it should be, right?
Mar 5, 2023
Searching for Alien Probes in the Solar System
Posted by Dan Breeden in category: alien life
An updated look at how we are preparing to search the solar system in SETI to see whether anyone has ever stationed an alien probe in the star system including just what we might look for.
My Patreon Page:
Continue reading “Searching for Alien Probes in the Solar System” »