Vote for the Cover Image of October “Astronomy and Geophysics”

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Jun 2013 Edition of A&G

We are pleased to announce an open vote for the cover image of the October 2013 issue of “Astronomy and Geophysics” (the magazine of the Royal Astronomical Society).

A write-up of the Specialist Discussion the science team ran at the Royal Astronomical Society in May on “Morphology in the Era of Large Surveys” is going to appear in the October issue of A&G , so we were asked to nominate a cover image for this issue.

Rather than just have the science team pick our favourite image, we thought it would be nice to open up the choice to our volunteers. After all it’s you that make Galaxy Zoo special, and a unique way of dealing with morphology in the era of large surveys.

So we have put together five images for you to vote on. These are images which would make good covers for the magazine, and which the science team think either have a special connection to the Galaxy Zoo project, or illustrate something special about Galaxy Zoo and its contributions to the understanding of galaxy evolution. Subject to final approval by the editors, the image that wins this vote will appear on the cover of A&G for October 2013.

Hannys-Voorwerp-HST

1. Hanny’s Voorwerp – Nominated by PI of the Zooniverse, Chris Lintott (@chrislintott): “Hanny’s Voorwerp is the iconic Galaxy Zoo discovery, the find that demonstrated that as well as systematically classifying galaxies volunteers could serendipitously find marvelous things. A galaxy-scale glowing cloud of hot gas, it tells us that IC 2497, its neighbour, was home to a rapidly feeding black hole perhaps as recently as 50,000 years ago. Hanny’s find inspired astronomers all over the world to point their telescopes at it, and a search for similar objects which has paid spectacular rewards.”

ngc-3314-cosmic-collision

2. NGC 3314 – Nominated by GZ Science Team Member Bill Keel (@NCG3314): “NGC 3314 is a rare superposition of galaxies at different distances, allowing us to measure the effects of dust in the foreground galaxy with unusual clarity. Galaxy Zoo participants made a powerful contribution to this kind of science, by helping to select a catalog of nearly 2000 overlapping-galaxy pairs, many of which have been the targets of further study to help understand how the content and distribution on galaxies change with galaxy structure and size. Furthermore, they are just plain cool.”

The Great Barred Spiral Galaxy

3. NGC 1365 – Nominated by GZ Project Scientist, Karen Masters (@KarenLMasters): “NGC 1365 is beautiful big barred spiral galaxy in the Fornax constellation. Galaxy Zoo classifications of bars in spiral galaxy have contributed to a growing realisation of the important role bars play in the evolution of galaxies, including a possible role in turning spirals red.”

penguingalaxy

Arp 142, aka the Penguin Galaxy – Nominated by GZ Forum and Talk moderator, Alice Sheppard (@penguingalaxy), who treasures this as her first interesting find from when Galaxy Zoo was first born. Illustrating the fun side of Galaxy Zoo, which involves a zoo of galactic animals and an alphabet of galactic letters, the “penguin” resembles a bird admiring its egg. It was first classified by Halton Arp as a peculiar galaxy: a spiral with lanes of dust and star formation bent out of shape by the intense gravity of an elliptical, and more recently imaged by the Hubble Space Telescope and horrifyingly mis-species-ed by APOD as a porpoise.

hs-2003-28-a-large_web

5. The Sombrero Galaxy – Nominated by Rob Simpson (@orbitingfrog) from the Zooniverse: “The Sombrero galaxy illustrates really well that galaxies aren’t just filled with stars but also dust. In the Sombrero you can see the thin ring of dust neatly contained inside the disk. This is where the raw material for star formation comes from and we can probe this colder stuff using infrared and submillimetre telescopes. ” The Sombrero also illustrates than not all galaxies fall simply into either spiral or elliptical categories.

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About karenlmasters

Professor of Astronomy and Physics at Haverford College, USA. Principle Investigator for Galaxy Zoo. Enjoys using radio telescopes and trying to make sure some spectrum remains open for the future. Busy having fun doing astronomy!

17 responses to “Vote for the Cover Image of October “Astronomy and Geophysics””

  1. Alice says :

    Hey, I didn’t nominate the Penguin – Karen and/or Brooke did. Not that I object to it being there. It’s adorable. Thank you! ❤

    • Ray Sullivan says :

      I think the Penguin should actually be called the Hummingbird. I see a long pointed beak and the red of the wing obstructing the face with it’s tail spread for stability.

  2. tnetcenter says :

    I vote for #2, The Sombrero galaxy is one of the most published images out there – let’s get something else like NGC3314

  3. karenlmasters says :

    Just an update that we’re aiming to finish the poll at 4pm BST on 1st August so that we can send our favourite image choice to A&G in time for the October issue.

  4. Marcia Rodrigues says :

    I vote for #2: NGC 3314
    breathtaking!!

  5. Gregorio says :

    WWWoooffff.. amazing pics!!!! i voted 5. The Sombrero (is it a spiral or is it an elliptical?)

  6. glm21 says :

    wwoooff amazing pics, i voted 5

  7. Rman_nl says :

    Number 1… and yes I’m dutch. 😉

  8. Rudy Leys says :

    Hanny’s Voorwerp is to me, the most inspiring for Galaxy Zoo volunteers.

  9. svdwal says :

    The other pictures are beautifull. But they are not about GalaxyZoo. They are about Hubble, or whatever telescope photographed them. Hanny’s Voorwerp is the object that showed the world what GalaxyZoo is.

  10. Fabricius says :

    Hanny rules!

  11. Jacobus van Hemert says :

    Yet another vote for the Voorwerp here!

  12. Jacobus van Hemert says :

    I’m voting for the Voorwerp (possibly twice because something seems to have gone wrong previously)

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