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Reading: Calling citizen scientists! Help NASA’s Galaxy Zoo classify galaxies seen by James Webb Space Telescope
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Stay Current on Political News—The US Future > Blog > Space > Calling citizen scientists! Help NASA’s Galaxy Zoo classify galaxies seen by James Webb Space Telescope
Space

Calling citizen scientists! Help NASA’s Galaxy Zoo classify galaxies seen by James Webb Space Telescope

Sophia Martin
Sophia Martin
Published May 12, 2025
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NASA is looking for public help to classify thousands of galaxies photographed by the James Webb space telescope (JWST).

Through Citizen Sciences ProjectCalled Galaxy Zoo (part of the platform Son -Se), volunteers can help astronomers analyze more than 500,000 JWST images Identify the forms of galaxies and how they have changed over time. This, in turn, contributions to our understanding of the evolution of The universeAccording to a NASA statement.

“This is a great opportunity to see images of the newest space telescope,” said Christine Macmillan, a volunteer from Galaxy Zoo Project from Aberdeen, Scotland, in The statement. “The galaxies on the edge of our universe are seen for the first time, just as they are beginning to form. Just register and answer simple questions about the shape of the galaxy you are seeing. Anyone can do it, 10 years and older!”

With its advanced infrared capabilities, Jwst He has tried an unprecedented vision of the cosmos, revealing galaxies at greater distances than ever. The space telescope can see distant objects as they appeared billions of years ago, offering ideas about the early stages of galaxies formation, childbirth in stars and processes that have shaped the cosmos in time.

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JWST’s image tasks are loaded to the Galaxy Zoo, which uses an algorithm of the so -called Zobot to identify those that are easier to analyze for volunteers. As part of the project, participants are asked a series of questions to help classify the form, structure and characteristics of a Galaxy Presented in an image on the screen.

“I am amazed and honored to be one of the first people to see real thesis images!” Elisabeth Baeten, a volunteer from Galaxy Zoo, voluntary of Leuven, Belgium, said in the statement. “What a privilege!”

Any person interested in helping NASA to classify Galaxy images can visit the online Galaxies Zoo platform.

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