Hubble espía una joya galáctica: una inusual fusión de galaxias con múltiples brazos

Galaxy CGCG 396-2, una inusual fusión galáctica de múltiples brazos ubicada a unos 520 millones de años luz de la Tierra en la constelación de Orión, capturada por el Telescopio Espacial Hubble. Crédito: ESA/Hubble y NASA, W. Keel

La galaxia CGCG 396-2, una fusión inusual de galaxias con múltiples armaduras ubicada a unos 520 millones de años luz de la Tierra en la constelación de Orión, ha sido capturada en este impresionante[{» attribute=»»>NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope observation.

This observation is a gem from a citizen science project, known as the Galaxy Zoo project, in which hundreds of thousands of volunteers classified galaxies to help scientists solve a problem of astronomical proportions — how to sort through the vast amounts of data generated by robotic telescopes. Following a public vote, a selection of the most astronomically intriguing objects from the Galaxy Zoo was chosen for follow-up observations with Hubble. CGCG 396-2 is one of object the objects selected, and it was captured in this image by Hubble’s Advanced Camera for Surveys.

The Galaxy Zoo project originated when an astronomer was given the impossibly mind-numbing task of classifying more than 900,000 galaxies by eye. By making a web interface and inviting citizen scientists to contribute to the challenge, the Galaxy Zoo team was able to crowdsource the analysis. It was an incredible success: within six months a legion of 100,000 volunteer citizen astronomers had contributed more than 40 million galaxy classifications.

Since its initial success, the Galaxy Zoo project and its successor projects have contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific articles and led to a rich variety of intriguing astronomical discoveries above and beyond their initial goals. The success of the project also inspired more than 100 citizen science projects on the Zooniverse portal, ranging from analyzing data from the ESA Rosetta spacecraft’s visit to Comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko to counting killer whales around remote Alaskan islands!

READ  Caminar continuamente mejora la función cerebral en personas mayores

Deja una respuesta

Tu dirección de correo electrónico no será publicada. Los campos obligatorios están marcados con *