Euclid mission calls on citizen scientists to map distant galaxies
The European Space Agency seeks amateurs' help. In collaboration with the Galaxy Zoo service, ESA will encourage "citizen scientists" to participate in describing galaxies observed by the Euclid satellite.
The European Space Agency has embarked on a new initiative under its Euclid project, which aims to study the impact of dark matter and dark energy on the visible universe. Collaborating with the Galaxy Zoo service, ESA has enabled amateurs, called "citizen scientists," to participate in this ambitious project by helping to describe the galaxies observed by the Euclid satellite. The first batch of images available for analysis contains thousands of photographs of distant galaxies.
The Euclid project, launched last year, results from collaboration between ESA and NASA. As part of this mission, a telescope was sent into space to observe and study the impact of dark matter and dark energy on the visible universe. The Euclid satellite observes distant galaxies, planning to study hundreds of millions of them. In the future, the telescope is expected to transmit hundreds of gigabytes of data daily, constituting a vast amount of images to interpret.
Due to this enormous amount of data, ESA decided to collaborate with the Galaxy Zoo service, which aims to engage amateurs in analyzing and describing galaxies. Although experts are expected to receive the first data only in 2025, amateurs can already browse and explore the images sent so far in Galaxy Zoo. This service already contains materials with tens of thousands of galaxies.
Volunteers who decide to participate in the project may be the first people in the world to see galaxies that have never been observed before. They will be asked to answer a series of questions about the observed galaxies, such as whether a given galaxy has a circular shape, whether spiral arms are visible, and so on.
The Galaxy Zoo project was created in 2007 with the idea that volunteers could help describe a million galaxies observed under the Sloan Digital Sky Survey mission. To date, more than 40,000 people have described images of galaxies from various missions, including those provided by the Hubble and Webb space telescopes.
Amateur scientists' work has two main goals. First, their descriptions of galaxies will be helpful to scientists. Second, they will allow for better training of artificial intelligence, which will independently analyze images in the future.
An algorithm named ZooBot is already operational in Galaxy Zoo. It initially automatically analyzes images sent by Euclid. If the algorithm encounters difficulties interpreting an image, it transfers it to volunteers for analysis. After improvement, ZooBot will automatically catalog images sent by Euclid showing hundreds of millions of galaxies.
Thanks to the Euclid mission, the largest catalog of galaxies in history will be created, representing a significant leap forward in studying the universe.