I doubt it. The so-called "habitable zone" may be a myth, since radiant output of the stars within the plane of the planetary orbits of the systems cannot be measured accurately because the internal zone proximate to the central star is obscured by dust and debris/ So the astronomers are guessing about the habitable zone. Atheists are always trying to push the notion that "it's only a matter of time" until extraterrestrial life is discovered - so they can then insist that God does not exist.
For militant atheists, the discovery would be their signal to declare Humanity to be "nothing special" and so they wait anxiously for the day to arrive. All of the insinuations made by nihilist scientists that "life in the universe is likely everywhere" fall very short of supporting fact.
Every time I hear another militant atheist egghead mocking theists because there are so many "potentially habitable planets", I ask myself, "Yet, we have never heard from them. Why can't atheists explain the Fermi Paradox?"
Until the atheists can do that, I laugh at their idiocy in suggesting that intelligent life in the universe is probably very common. It's certainly not common on Earth.