Citizen scientists can now also use their brains to help find new pulsars
MILWAUKEE _ Citizen scientists have provided important help to astronomers exploring the heavens, and now they are invited to take a more hands-on role.
In their efforts to scour the universe for evidence of gravitational waves, scientists have enlisted the help of 15,000 volunteers who donated their private computers’ downtime in a citizen-science project called Einstein@Home.
Neutron stars are compact remnants of exploded massive stars. Pulsars are a special kind of rotating neutron star that emits beacons of radiation at regular intervals.
Donated computer time from Einstein@Home participants also is helping analyze observations from some of the largest radio telescopes on Earth, including the now-decommissioned Arecibo Radio Telescope, to identify pulsars. Most pulsars are detected by the radio waves they emit, but they are difficult to extract from the telescope data.
Now, Einstein@Home volunteers can take a more active role by classifying pulsar candidates from radio telescope data using graphical representations and other characteristics of the data. Volunteers can sign up to join “Pulsar Seekers,” on the citizen science platform Zooniverse.
The project’s science team has taken the first step to narrow the huge field of potential pulsar candidates using sophisticated algorithms, said Rahul Sengar, a UWM postdoctoral researcher who is leading Pulsar Seekers.
But the remaining number is formidable, Sengar said. “The number of candidates is so large that it is impractical for one person to do the job. This makes the collective human effort of Zooniverse participants invaluable in identifying true pulsar candidates,” he said.
With the help of Pulsar Seekers, scientists hope to have the manpower to find pulsars in very tight orbits with one another.
This kind of pulsar is more difficult to identify but is important because they could contain information on questions such as the origin of heavy elements in the universe, said David Kaplan, UWM professor of physics.
Scientists want to be able to compare binary neutrons in our galaxy with those that can be detected in distant galaxies with the LIGO and Virgo observatories, he said.
The pulsar census work is already underway, Sengar said. To date, Einstein@Home has discovered 31 radio pulsars in data from the Arecibo telescope, 24 radio pulsars in data from Parkes Observatory in Australia, and 39 gamma-ray emitting pulsars in data from NASA’s Fermi Gamma-ray Space Observatory.
“We can’t wait to see what Zooniverse citizen scientists discover in our data,” Sengar said.
Anyone interested in participating can get more information and sign up on the Zooniverse website.
NOTE: This press release was submitted to Urban Milwaukee and was not written by an Urban Milwaukee writer. While it is believed to be reliable, Urban Milwaukee does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness.
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