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Classifying the cosmos
May/June 2009
by Bruce Fellman

©Sloan Digital Sky Survey
Look
hard at the galaxy in the photograph. See anything odd about it?
A
computer might recognize that NGC 5395 is a spiral. But it would probably miss
something crucial: this galaxy has a companion. "A human observer would spot
this right away," says Kevin Schawinski, a postdoctoral researcher in astronomy.
"Our brains can see things a computer can't."
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"Our brains can see things a computer can't."
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Two
years ago, Schawinksi, then a graduate student at Oxford, and a few of his
colleagues figured out a way to put this human talent to work. The Sloan
Digital Sky Survey had amassed an image collection of nearly a million galaxies
in about one quarter of the Northern Hemisphere sky. But researchers had been
able to examine and categorize only a small fraction. "One night in a pub, we
came up with an idea: put the images on the Internet and see if we could get
people to help us," says Schawinski. They thought public interest would be
relatively limited. "Within 24 hours, we had melted a server."
Thus
was born Galaxy Zoo, a citizen-science project open to anyone with a computer,
an Internet connection, and a fascination with outer space. So far, nearly
200,000 people have taken the ten-minute tutorial and signed up for the Zoo,
now in its second phase. "We've found that the average person is as good at
this as any professional astronomer," says Schawinski. 
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