Hi there,
Please help us test a possible new Zooniverse project - Cosmic Cataclysms.
What the researchers say: "The Universe produces a wide range of "transient" astronomical events: signals visible only for a moment, before fading away forever. Exploding stars, massive neutron stars, and black holes are predicted to power the most fleeting of these events. Discovering and understanding new fast transients can therefore elucidate the extreme physics behind the lives and deaths of these astronomical objects.
With lifetimes far less than a day, rapid transients are challenging to detect from the ground. We use data from NASA's TESS space telescope, in conjunction with a new detection pipeline (TESSELLATE), to look for changes in the sky that would otherwise be missed.
As a volunteer, you can contribute to Cosmic Cataclysms by examining the events detected by our pipeline and classifying them based on changes in their appearance and brightness. As these detections span from asteroids to supernovae, you'll get familiar with a wide range of objects, and you might be the first person to see something new and interesting flash in the night sky."
Try it out now at https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/che ... cataclysms and give us your feedback via this form https://forms.gle/rG3km9ifVhYnHqos7 (which you can also reach by clicking the link on the project itself).
Your feedback is extremely important to us when deciding whether to approve or reject a project. To date you have helped launch over 450 Zooniverse projects!
Thanks for all your help!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team
Zooniverse
Re: Zooniverse
Hello, Zooniverse!
Let’s sail into climate past, charting historical rainfall in Southeast Asia.
The Monsoon Voyages aims to digitise and analyse historical rainfall data of SE Asia from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries. This initiative addresses the critical need for long-term climate records to better understand past climate and inform future plans for agriculture, water supply, and flood management. At this instance, researchers are digitising mid-19th Century ship logbooks of British Royal Navy. Singapore and the Malacca Straits were an important segment of the global east-west trade route. Numerous ships passed through these seas, anchoring in many ports along the Malaysian and Indonesian coasts.
As ships’ often observed and recorded weather observations several times a day, even when in port, this creates a very important source of observations for places and times when land-based observations are not available. These ship logbooks not only contain climate history, but they are also first-hand witnesses of some of important historical events, for example, Second Anglo-Chinese War ("Opium war") of 1856 – 1860, Anglo-Japanese hostilities of 1863 – 1864, etc. These records offer rich perspective into monsoon behaviour, extreme weather events, and seasonal variability. By rescuing and digitising historical weather records, you are helping to ensure that valuable data is not lost to time. Read more at www.monsoonvoyages.org
Get involved at https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/p-t ... on-voyages
Happy classifying!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team
Let’s sail into climate past, charting historical rainfall in Southeast Asia.
The Monsoon Voyages aims to digitise and analyse historical rainfall data of SE Asia from the mid-19th to mid-20th centuries. This initiative addresses the critical need for long-term climate records to better understand past climate and inform future plans for agriculture, water supply, and flood management. At this instance, researchers are digitising mid-19th Century ship logbooks of British Royal Navy. Singapore and the Malacca Straits were an important segment of the global east-west trade route. Numerous ships passed through these seas, anchoring in many ports along the Malaysian and Indonesian coasts.
As ships’ often observed and recorded weather observations several times a day, even when in port, this creates a very important source of observations for places and times when land-based observations are not available. These ship logbooks not only contain climate history, but they are also first-hand witnesses of some of important historical events, for example, Second Anglo-Chinese War ("Opium war") of 1856 – 1860, Anglo-Japanese hostilities of 1863 – 1864, etc. These records offer rich perspective into monsoon behaviour, extreme weather events, and seasonal variability. By rescuing and digitising historical weather records, you are helping to ensure that valuable data is not lost to time. Read more at www.monsoonvoyages.org
Get involved at https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/p-t ... on-voyages
Happy classifying!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team
Re: Zooniverse
studentforever wrote: ↑Tue Nov 05, 2024 5:08 pm I see the Singapore Government is interested in local historical weather reports and has access to some of the Royal Navy logbooks. Zooniverse are hosting a tr.anscription project. As usual they simplify the transcription and you are presented with individual columns of data to enter from random ships. They just seem to have the weather data, the page I investigated had no events at all. However that is another batch of weather data for the scientists to work on. Not sure how many ships they have but they are all in the same general region i.e Singapore so unlike our voyages they focus on the area rather than the ship.
https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/p-t ... t/research
Just thought I'd dip into their "Talk" section - very peculiar format and you have to log on to see very much. However, I think they are doing complete voyages rather than just the section round Singpore. The couple of contributions I did manage to see mentioned places which definitely weren't around Singapore. Thought I might contribute but I would find it frustrating not to have access to the complete log - the events can be really interesting - they've kept me hooked for years!!
Re: Zooniverse
I found contact info for a couple of their lead researchers, and I sent them an email about our work. We have already done 10 ships that sailed through Singapore.
Re: Zooniverse
Thank you, Michael&Randi! Looking forward to working with the OW community.
Re: Zooniverse
Greetings --
Space Warps is back!
We’re so excited to launch a new Space Warps project -- Space Warps - ESA Euclid -- to find strong gravitational lenses in sky images from the ESA Euclid Space Telescope! Read on for more information from the team about the project.
Find the needles in a haystack - spot the elusive hidden distant galaxies using the power of gravitational lensing in exquisite new Euclid data!
Massive galaxies warp space-time, bending light rays so that we can see around them to even more distant galaxies. These gravitational lenses are super rare but in previous surveys you have already helped us find hundreds of new candidates. We're improving our analysis using your data, and finding even more interesting images - come and help us find more lenses!
In this new project, we will be inspecting new high quality imaging data from the ESA Euclid Space Telescope in which many previously unknown strong lenses will be hiding. We can expect many new lenses, more than we have discovered before, to be revealed in this exceptional data.
We are very excited to ask you for help to inspect the candidates. In this first batch, we have around 30,000 images to inspect. Given your success in the past, we think we can inspect all of these images in a week! Can you help us reach our target of 150,000 classifications by next week and meet this challenge? We think you can!
Join us and be a cosmic lens hunter!
To get started, please visit:
https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/apr ... esa-euclid
Please note: the Zooniverse platform will be offline for scheduled maintenance on Wednesday, November 20 from 4pm-10pm US Central Standard Time (2024-11-20 22:00 UTC to 2024-11-21 4:00 UTC). During this period, all projects and platform services will be inaccessible. We apologize for the inconvenience; this maintenance is necessary to make updates to platform infrastructure and improve long-term reliability and uptime. Please visit status.zooniverse.org for updates before and during the downtime period. For any additional questions, please email contact@zooniverse.org.
Good luck with this new project -- take care!
Cliff & the Zooniverse Team
Space Warps is back!
We’re so excited to launch a new Space Warps project -- Space Warps - ESA Euclid -- to find strong gravitational lenses in sky images from the ESA Euclid Space Telescope! Read on for more information from the team about the project.
Find the needles in a haystack - spot the elusive hidden distant galaxies using the power of gravitational lensing in exquisite new Euclid data!
Massive galaxies warp space-time, bending light rays so that we can see around them to even more distant galaxies. These gravitational lenses are super rare but in previous surveys you have already helped us find hundreds of new candidates. We're improving our analysis using your data, and finding even more interesting images - come and help us find more lenses!
In this new project, we will be inspecting new high quality imaging data from the ESA Euclid Space Telescope in which many previously unknown strong lenses will be hiding. We can expect many new lenses, more than we have discovered before, to be revealed in this exceptional data.
We are very excited to ask you for help to inspect the candidates. In this first batch, we have around 30,000 images to inspect. Given your success in the past, we think we can inspect all of these images in a week! Can you help us reach our target of 150,000 classifications by next week and meet this challenge? We think you can!
Join us and be a cosmic lens hunter!
To get started, please visit:
https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/apr ... esa-euclid
Please note: the Zooniverse platform will be offline for scheduled maintenance on Wednesday, November 20 from 4pm-10pm US Central Standard Time (2024-11-20 22:00 UTC to 2024-11-21 4:00 UTC). During this period, all projects and platform services will be inaccessible. We apologize for the inconvenience; this maintenance is necessary to make updates to platform infrastructure and improve long-term reliability and uptime. Please visit status.zooniverse.org for updates before and during the downtime period. For any additional questions, please email contact@zooniverse.org.
Good luck with this new project -- take care!
Cliff & the Zooniverse Team
Re: Zooniverse
Hello, Zooniverse!
We're excited to introduce the ReData project, a collaboration between Meteonetwork, Università Statale di Milano, and Politecnico di Milano. The goal of ReData - short for Recovery of Data - is to digitize Italian historical meteorological bulletins collected by the Royal Central Meteorological Office from 1880 to 1940. These bulletins contain data on barometric pressure, temperatures, wind speed and direction gathered from stations throughout Italy.
Data rescue efforts like this are essential for two key reasons. First, these valuable documents are deteriorating in their original paper format. Second, once digitized, this data can enrich climate research datasets, helping to improve reanalysis models that reconstruct past weather - a valuable resource to the entire scientific community studying climate and atmospheric sciences.
You can help make history accessible! Visit our page, select a station from the bulletins, and start transcribing meteorological data from the past.
Get involved visiting our page: https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/meteonetwork/redata
Happy classifying!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team
We're excited to introduce the ReData project, a collaboration between Meteonetwork, Università Statale di Milano, and Politecnico di Milano. The goal of ReData - short for Recovery of Data - is to digitize Italian historical meteorological bulletins collected by the Royal Central Meteorological Office from 1880 to 1940. These bulletins contain data on barometric pressure, temperatures, wind speed and direction gathered from stations throughout Italy.
Data rescue efforts like this are essential for two key reasons. First, these valuable documents are deteriorating in their original paper format. Second, once digitized, this data can enrich climate research datasets, helping to improve reanalysis models that reconstruct past weather - a valuable resource to the entire scientific community studying climate and atmospheric sciences.
You can help make history accessible! Visit our page, select a station from the bulletins, and start transcribing meteorological data from the past.
Get involved visiting our page: https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/meteonetwork/redata
Happy classifying!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team
Re: Zooniverse
Hi there,
Please help us test a possible new Zooniverse project - Adélie penguins on Ross Island.
What the researchers say:
"Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) are considered a key biological indicator species in the Antarctic, in part due to how much they like to eat Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), which is a tiny (and difficult to monitor) but very important species in the Southern Ocean. Through knowing how many Adélie penguins there are, scientists can get important insights into things such as the effectiveness of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), the effects of environmental change, or the impacts of fisheries in the area.
The aim of this project is to utilise citizen science to identify Adélie penguins in a collection of photographs taken over Ross Island. Historically there have been an estimated 300,000+ Adélie penguins breeding on Ross Island, so counting them all is a big job!"
Try it out now at https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/kie ... oss-island and give us your feedback via this form https://forms.gle/QKGsCzEBd1eKSiUx9 (which you can also reach by clicking the link on the project itself).
Your feedback is extremely important to us when deciding whether to approve or reject a project. To date you have helped launch over 450 Zooniverse projects!
Thanks for all your help!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team
Please help us test a possible new Zooniverse project - Adélie penguins on Ross Island.
What the researchers say:
"Adélie penguins (Pygoscelis adeliae) are considered a key biological indicator species in the Antarctic, in part due to how much they like to eat Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba), which is a tiny (and difficult to monitor) but very important species in the Southern Ocean. Through knowing how many Adélie penguins there are, scientists can get important insights into things such as the effectiveness of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs), the effects of environmental change, or the impacts of fisheries in the area.
The aim of this project is to utilise citizen science to identify Adélie penguins in a collection of photographs taken over Ross Island. Historically there have been an estimated 300,000+ Adélie penguins breeding on Ross Island, so counting them all is a big job!"
Try it out now at https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/kie ... oss-island and give us your feedback via this form https://forms.gle/QKGsCzEBd1eKSiUx9 (which you can also reach by clicking the link on the project itself).
Your feedback is extremely important to us when deciding whether to approve or reject a project. To date you have helped launch over 450 Zooniverse projects!
Thanks for all your help!
Alisa & the Zooniverse Team