Web users to write ‘Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxies’

17 February 2009


How many arms does a spiral galaxy have? Can you spot a galaxy with a ‘peanut’ bulge? Or how about a galactic merger? Answers to these and other strange questions will be provided by ordinary web users who, by working together, have proven to be just as good at galaxy-spotting as professional astronomers.
 
The new initiative is a follow-up to the highly successful Galaxy Zoo project that enabled members of the public to take part in astronomy research online. But whereas the original site only asked members of the public to say whether a galaxy was spiral or elliptical, and which way it was rotating, Galaxy Zoo 2 asks them to delve deeper into 250,000 of the brightest and best galaxies to search for the strange and unusual.
 
The Galaxy Zoo 2 website is launched on 17 February at www.galaxyzoo.org
 
‘The first Galaxy Zoo provided us with a Rough Guide to the sky and now we want our users to fill in all the details and create a real Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxies,’ said Dr Chris Lintott of Oxford University, one of the founders of Galaxy Zoo.
 
Astronomers came up with the idea of getting online volunteers involved because the human brain is still better at doing pattern recognition tasks than a computer. What they had not expected was the huge enthusiasm for the project; in the last 18 months 80 million classifications of galaxies were submitted on one million objects at www.galaxyzoo.org by more than 150,000 armchair astronomers from all over the world.
 
Dr Kevin Schawinski of Yale University, another of Galaxy Zoo's founders said: 'The response from the public was absolutely overwhelming and, with their help, we've been able to learn a lot about how galaxies evolve and how they relate to their environment. With the detail from Zoo 2, we'll be able to discover even more about how galaxies work.'
 
‘Galaxy Zoo has given everyone with a computer an opportunity to contribute to real scientific research. We want people to feel truly involved in the project and keep them up to date with what we’re doing and with the results they’re generating,’ said Dr Steven Bamford of the University of Nottingham.
 
As with the original site people are free to look at and describe as many galaxies as they like – even five minutes’ work will provide a valuable contribution. Galaxy Zoo 2 is intended to be even more fun as galaxies are pitted against each other in ‘Galaxy Wars’ (which one is more spirally?) and users can compete against their friends to describe more objects as well as record their best finds.
 
Proof that unusual discoveries can be made is the catalogue of merging galaxies provided by users – more than 3000 of these rare cosmic pile-ups have been caught in the act by Galaxy Zoo volunteers. The team have already used the IRAM radio telescope in Spain’s Sierra Nevada to follow up the most exciting mergers, and are asking for more examples to study.
 
‘In this International Year of Astronomy, it’s great to have so many people looking at these beautiful image of galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey,’ said Professor Bob Nichol of the University of Portsmouth, a member of the original Galaxy Zoo team. ‘No single professional astronomer has ever looked at all these images and sometimes astronomers miss the wonder of what they are. I think the public get this better than us.’
 
For more information visit www.galaxyzoo.org or contact Dr Chris Lintott of Oxford University on +44 (0)1865 273638; email cjl@astro.ox.ac.uk 

Alternatively, contact the University of Oxford Press Office on +44 (0)1865 283877 or email press.office@admin.ox.ac.uk
 
Or Dr Steven Bamford of the University of Nottingham on +44 (0)115 846 8815; mobile +44 (0)7812 028021 or email steven.bamford@nottingham.ac.uk
 
Or Professor Bob Nichol of the University of Portsmouth on +44 (0)23 9284 3117; mobile : +44 (0)7963792049 or email bob.nichol@port.ac.uk
 
USA CONTACTS: Dr Kevin Schawinski of Yale University on +1 203 432-9759 or email kevin.schawinski@yale.edu or Suzanne Taylor-Muzzin at the Yale office of public affairs; +1 203 432 8555 or suzanne.taylormuzzin@yale.edu

Notes for Editors:

 

  • The Galaxy Zoo team is led by scientists from the University of Oxford, the University of Nottingham, the University of Portsmouth, Johns Hopkins University (USA), UC Berkeley (USA), Penn State (USA), Adler Planetarium, Chicago (USA) and Yale (USA), and Fingerprint Digital Media of Belfast. The development of Galaxy Zoo 2 was funded by The Leverhulme Trust, and a grant from Microsoft.
  • The new digital images used in Galaxy Zoo were taken using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey telescope in New Mexico. For more on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey visit www.sdss.org For full details of those involved go to www.sdss.org/collaboration/credits.html