The Asian Age

‘ AI may search for gravitatio­nal waves’

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London, April 10: Scientists have used artificial intelligen­ce tools to train an AI ‘ brain’ to search for gravitatio­nal wave signals.

Gravitatio­nal waves, ripples in space- time caused by massive astronomic­al events, were first hypothesis­ed by Albert Einstein in 1915.

It took another century before the Laser I n t e r f e r o m e t r y Grav i t a t i o n a l - Wave Observator­y ( LIGO) detectors in the US first picked up the very faint signals from the collision of binary black holes.

Researcher­s at the University of Glasgow in the UK investigat­ed whether deep learning, a form of artificial intelligen­ce, could help make the process of detection of gravitatio­nal waves more computatio­nally efficient.

They used a process known as supervised deep learning to build an AI capable of correctly picking out gravitatio­nal wave signals buried in noise from thousands of simulated datasets which they created.

Currently, gravitatio­nal wave signals are picked from the background noise of the detectors using a technique known as matched filtering.

Signals which match the shape of a template waveform are then examined more closely to determine whether they represent a genuine gravitatio­nal wave detection.

However, the process requires a great deal of computing power, said a s t r o p h y s i c i s t Christophe­r Messenger, who led the study published in the journal Physical Review Letters.

“Deep learning algorithms involve stacked arrays of processing units, which we call neurons, which act as filters for the input data,” said Hunter Gabbard from the University of Glasgow.

“What makes this process faster and more efficient than matched- filtering is that the training set is where all the computatio­nally intensive activity occurs.

“Once the deep learning algorithm learns what to look for in a signal, it has the potential to be orders of magnitude faster than other methods,” said Gabbard.

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