Galaxy Zoo: Supernova is back
After a couple of trial runs in August and October, the hunt for supernovae is now back – and we need your help again! As before, we’re supporting the Palomar Transient Factory in their search for supernovae, and we have an upcoming observing run, this time at the Palomar 200in telescope.
We are hoping to keep the supernova hunt website up for good now – no more trials! – and so no danger of you being cut off in a few days time.
A few pieces of news from the supernova hunt.
The first is that we would have been back sooner, but Palomar, the observatory at which PTF operates, has suffered unusual atmospheric conditions following the forest fires in Southern California over the summer. A build-up of ash and dust in the atmosphere has meant the number of nights on which the observatory has been open has been greatly reduced, and so the supernova search has been offline for much of the Autumn. Even now, the conditions are still unstable, so please bear with us if the number of candidates is very small!
The second is that in the near future we will have a website containing feedback on the classifications that you’ve all been doing. We’re also in the process of writing a scientific paper on the trial runs from earlier in the year.
Finally, we are planning to add other supernova searches to the hunt – so watch this space for more data.
That’s all for now. Good luck with the supernova hunting, and don’t forget to post questions or comments over in the forum!
Voorwerping, Part 2
We’ve been working hard at making sense of the X-ray data from Suzaku and it turns out we (that is, Shanil) will have to do a very, very careful analysis of the data beyond what is described in the handbook to be sure we understand what the data mean. In the meantime, I’ve started the paper and generated some new, very beautiful composite images of IC 2497 and the Voorwerp…
She's an Astronomer: Pamela L. Gay

Pamela & her horse Skye
Dr Pamela L. Gay is on the faculty at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville where she teaches, produces the Astronomy Cast podcast with Fraser Cain, and works with the Galaxy Zoo project. In addition to podcasting, she also works to communicate astronomy to the public through her Star Stryder blog, through frequent public talks, and through popular articles. She received a B.S. in Astrophysis from Michigan State University in 1996 and a Ph.D. in Astronomy from the University of Texas in 2002. While it may seem (even to her!) that she either lives on campus or online, she actually lives in a historic house in southern Illinois with her husband, two dogs, and a lot of books. Whenever she can, she escapes to Liberty Prairie Farm to ride her horse Skye.
Read More…
Want to work with the Galaxy Zoo team?
The Zoo team is expanding once again, and we’re advertising jobs in Oxford and Chicago.
The Oxford job would be suitable for a postdoc who wants to do science with the Zoo, and get involved in the technical side of things. The job advert is here.
The two Chicago positions are for education researchers, based at the Adler planetarium. The adverts for these two positions are here.
Hope to be working with you soon…
Chris
Galaxy Zoo: Mergers – A personal perspective
Now that the launch of Galaxy Zoo: Understanding Cosmic Mergers has been completed, I wanted to give a personal perspective on this project.
For me, this project started twenty years ago when I was in graduate school. In my dissertation work, I modeling the tidal features of interacting galaxies. I wrote a Fortran code for doing some of this modeling work. You would set up a run, and then wait hours to see the result. If it didn’t match, you had to wait hours for the next attempt.

The worst part about the modeling process was getting the “final” result. Even if you got a close match, you never knew if you had actually found the best match. It was always possible that a completely different set of parameters was the real solution, and you had just made a mistake. Even with good fits, you couldn’t tell if you really had arrived at the ‘right’ solution.
Our understanding of galaxy collisions has been limited by the lack of dynamical models. For example, we know that some galaxy collisions have very high star formation rates. We also know that almost all extreme star burst galaxies (Ultra-luminous infrared galaxies) have undergone some type of collision. Why isn’t this sort of reaction the inevitable result of a merger? It seemed like the answer was always out of reach – unless we can understand the dynamics of lots of collisions.
The java applet developed for Mergers by Anthony Holincheck is the direct descendent of the old Fortran code. Now you can run the same kind of simulations I ran for my dissertation in fractions of a second. When Anthony and I first resurrected this code, we immediately tried using a Genetic Algorithm help us converge on the final solution. It didn’t work. We couldn’t reliably teach the computers how to recognize a good match. We could run a few hundred thousand simulations per day, but we never knew if we got the right results.
The idea of using volunteers to help us happened a few years ago. It was crazy and impractical to imagine volunteers helping out with a project like this. Even so, a group of us proposed to do. Of course, our proposal got shot down. After all, there was no way that this type of thing would work. How would you recruit such volunteers?
About a year later, I started talking with some of the team from Galaxy Zoo. You – the volunteers of Galaxy Zoo- have made the impossible possible. With your help, we can create the models we need to understand the histories of hundreds of galaxy collisions. These models will be more reliable than any a single scientist could create. This result alone would incredibly important. However, by carefully analyzing your inputs, we eventually hope to train the computers to do thousands of more models. This kind of man/machine partnership is being planned for a number of future data projects, where computers need help learning how to be scientists. We will never discover future Voorwerpen or new Peas without your help. However, in return, we will also never make you do busy work that a machine can do.
Your efforts on the Zoo projects have created a new the way to do science. This is nothing less than a transformation in how we look at data, analysis, and computing.
Of course, that’s just a personal perspective.
I just posted a new target for you to try. We are going to be doing updates at 1600 GMT everyday. even Thanksgiving. Of course, we will keep the old targets live for a week so you can go and revisit them. This one is a repeat from some of the beta tests. Getting a perfect model is hard, but getting close is easy. We didn’t want to make things too difficult – at least for now. Be assured, we will be kicking up a notch over the next days and weeks.
-John
Mergers Update
We have just changed the target on the Galaxy Zoo Mergers page (http://mergers.galaxyzoo.org). The new system has a broken ring and a nearby companion. It’s a very pretty system, and it seems to be a bit easier to model than the first one we posted. For all the systems we are putting up as challenges, we do a quick run ourselves to see if we can find any solutions that might be on-track. Although we found a few solutions right away, we don’t know if they are the best ones or if they are unique. Of course, that’s why we need your help.
We are going to be updating the target daily. Every day, we should will have a new cosmic collision for you to help us model.
If you can spend 10 minutes to quickly weed out the obvious bad ones on 20-30 screens, it would be a great help to us! The more clicks we have, the better we constrain the collision. Make sure you hit save when you are done looking at the images! Although we automatically back up some clicks, we don’t want to lose any of your data.
Thanks for all you do.
– John Wallin, Computational Scientist/Astronomer
Galaxy Zoo: Understanding Cosmic Mergers
Starting at midnight 11/24, our new site ‘Galaxy Zoo: Understanding Cosmic Mergers’ went on-line as a new project in Galaxy Zoo. In Mergers, we are working to understand the cosmic collisions that lead to galaxy mergers. Every day we will have a new target galaxy that we need your help to model. Based on the basic input parameters that we provide, a Java applet running in your browser will simulate some possible collision scenarios. Computers don’t do a good job comparing simulations and real astronomical images, so we need your help to find out which simulations are the most similar to the real galaxy collision.
Working on Mergers will require some patience. Some of the collisions we are trying to model are rarer than others, so don’t get discouraged. In some cases, you will need to look at a few hundred images to get your first close match. Just remember, you aren’t looking for perfection. Just try to find a simulation that has some of the unusual and unique tidal features of the target galaxy. When you found something close, you might want to go further and “enhance” the image to make even a better match. The more data we have on these galactic collisions, the more we can narrow down the input parameters that caused these systems to form. You can be the most helpful by looking at a lot of images and then select the best of the best through the evaluate mode of the applet. This will happen automatically when you have selected eight possible merger images.
My graduate student Anthony Holincheck and I have been working on this project for a long time, and are very excited to see it see it launch today. We want to thank all the Zooites that participated in our beta test. Zooites rock! Of course, thanks also go out to Arfon, Chris, Lucy, Nancy, Geza, and Mark in their work in the development. Without all of your help, this project would not be possible. Our team will be adding more features in the coming weeks and months, so please stay tuned.
As I write this blog, we are T-5 hours before the full launch of our site. I cannot help but be humbled by the incredible dedication of the Zooites. With your help, we are going to model the dynamics of hundreds of galaxy collisions. This effort will help us connect the dynamics of galaxy collision to the star formation rates in galaxies. Thank you for your on-going support Galaxy Zoo!
– John Wallin – Computational Scientist/Astronomer
Leaving La Silla
Our pea hunting observing run is over and, as you will have gathered from previous posts, it has gone very well. We travelled back from La Silla to Santiago last night, for another brief stay at the ESO Guesthouse. Now I’m about to get on the plane back to the UK.
We are thrilled with how well the run has gone. I’ve done a rough analysis of the data already and we’ve already started drafting the paper presenting the results! I’ll do a more careful analysis once I get back to the office, but early indications are that we’ve got a nice collection of higher redshift objects that are very similar to the fascinating SDSS Peas that were discovered on the Galaxy Zoo forum, and an almost perfect technique for finding more! I’ll keep you posted as our work progresses.
Technical problems
The Chilean Pea hunt continues…
You may have noticed the Galaxy Zoo blog was down over the weekend. Well, it wasn’t the only one to be experiencing technical difficulties. On Sunday night we unfortunately lost four hours of observing time to technical gremlins. First we tried to use a new filter, which resulted in a nice 10 minute exposure of nothing. After a trip to the telescope to look around inside the instrument, the support staff worked out the problem: the filter was mislabelled on the computer. With that figured out, we changed to the correct filter and carried on – only to be stopped in our tracks again a couple of hours later by the whole telescope control system crashing! This time it took three hours of methodical troubleshooting to fix the problem, apparently some problem with a power lead. By then the night was almost over.
She's an Astronomer: Julia Wilkinson

Julia Wilkinson (Jules)
Julia Wilkinson (aka Jules) manages an Advice Centre in Manchester by day and is an amateur astronomer by night – out with her telescopes or binoculars if it’s a clear, starry night or inside with Galaxy Zoo or an astronomy book if it’s cloudy. Julia has a degree in Economics and has also studied music and has a house full of musical instruments that she fully intends to find time to play again one day! A more recent interest is astrophotography and one or two of her photos have appeared on the forum’s astrophotography thread. Enticed into astronomy having grown up with the Apollo Moon programme she has always regretted not studying sciences at school but spurred on by her involvement in Galaxy Zoo she now studies science and particularly astronomy with the Open University.
