AI Detects, Confirms, Classifies, and Shares First Supernova

AI Detects, Confirms, Classifies, and Shares First Supernova

A ⁢fully automated process, including⁢ a brand-new artificial intelligence (AI) tool, has successfully detected, identified and classified its first supernova.

Developed by an international collaboration led‍ by Northwestern University, the new system automates the entire search for new⁢ supernovae across the night sky—effectively removing humans from the ‌process. Not only does this rapidly accelerate⁢ the process of analyzing and classifying new supernova⁤ candidates, it also bypasses human error.

The team‍ alerted the astronomical community⁢ to the⁣ launch and success of the new tool, called ‌the Bright Transient Survey ​Bot (BTSbot), ‌this week. In the past six years, humans have spent an estimated total of 2,200 ‍hours visually inspecting ‍and classifying⁢ supernova candidates. With the new tool now officially‌ online, researchers can redirect this⁣ precious time toward other responsibilities in⁣ order to accelerate⁤ the pace of discovery.

“For the first time ever, ⁤a‍ series ‍of robots and AI algorithms⁣ has observed,‌ then identified, then communicated with ⁢another telescope to finally confirm the⁣ discovery of a supernova,” said Northwestern’s Adam Miller, who led the work. “This represents an important step forward as further refinement of models will allow ​the robots to isolate specific subtypes of stellar explosions. ⁣Ultimately, removing humans⁣ from the loop provides ​more time for the research team to analyze their⁢ observations and develop new hypotheses to explain the origin of the cosmic⁢ explosions that we observe.”

“We achieved the world’s first‌ fully⁣ automatic detection, identification and classification of a supernova,” ‍added Northwestern’s Nabeel ⁤Rehemtulla, who co-led the technology development with‍ Miller. “This⁤ significantly streamlines large studies of supernovae, helping us better understand ⁤the life cycles of stars and ​the ⁢origin of⁣ elements supernovae ​create, like carbon, iron and gold.”

2023-10-13 22:24:03
Original from phys.org

Exit mobile version