Postulating exoplanetary habitability via a novel anomaly detection method

Author:

Sarkar Jyotirmoy1,Bhatia Kartik1,Saha Snehanshu2,Safonova Margarita3ORCID,Sarkar Santonu1

Affiliation:

1. BITS Pilani, K. K. Birla Goa Campus, Goa, India

2. CSIS and APPCAIR, BITS Pilani, K. K. Birla Goa Campus, Goa-403726, India

3. Indian Institute of Astrophysics, Bangalore, India

Abstract

ABSTRACT A profound shift in the study of cosmology came with the discovery of thousands of exoplanets and the possibility of the existence of billions of them in our Galaxy. The biggest goal in these searches is whether there are other life-harbouring planets. However, the question which of these detected planets are habitable, potentially-habitable, or maybe even inhabited, is still not answered. Some potentially habitable exoplanets have been hypothesised, but since Earth is the only known habitable planet, measures of habitability are necessarily determined with Earth as the reference. Several recent works introduced new habitability metrics based on optimisation methods. Classification of potentially habitable exoplanets using supervised learning is another emerging area of study. However, both modelling and supervised learning approaches suffer from drawbacks. We propose an anomaly detection method, the multi-stage memetic algorithm (MSMA), to detect anomalies and extend it to an unsupervised clustering algorithm multi-stage multi-version memetic clustering algorithm to use it to detect potentially habitable exoplanets as anomalies. The algorithm is based on the postulate that Earth is an anomaly, with the possibility of existence of few other anomalies among thousands of data points. We describe an MSMA-based clustering approach with a novel distance function to detect habitable candidates as anomalies (including Earth). The results are cross-matched with the Planetary Habitability Laboratory-habitable exoplanet catalogue (PHL-HEC) of the PHL with both optimistic and conservative lists of potentially habitable exoplanets.

Funder

Department of Science and Technology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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