this is an interesting question.. so far none robot has solved any Millennium Prize Problems yet.. i don't think the machine can do that before human does unless we have cybernetic superhuman.. We can’t deny that artificial intelligence can give insights/help us make better decisions and computational science solve various complex problems in more efficient and effective ways.. even ai is getting smarter than us at an exponential rate, humans (scientists) are still the inventors/who developed ai and robots..
this is an interesting question.. so far none robot has solved any Millennium Prize Problems yet.. i don't think the machine can do that before human does unless we have cybernetic superhuman.. We can’t deny that artificial intelligence can give insights/help us make better decisions and computational science solve various complex problems in more efficient and effective ways.. even ai is getting smarter than us at an exponential rate, humans (scientists) are still the inventors/who developed ai and robots..
Looking at the way Andrew Wiles solved Fermat's Last Theorem, it is extremely hard to envision how AI could have ever solved it that way - partly because the avenues explored that eventually led to a path to the solution involved far-fetched analogies with physical processes, and so on.
It is likely that the solutions to the remaining Millennium problems are extremely non-linear and exotic (otherwise we'd have figured them out already.) If AI were able to solve this then we could truly fear that AI has become unpredictably alive....