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  1. #1
    B5C's Avatar Campidoctor
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    Default Want to help find planets?

    Enter Planet Hunters, a citizen-scientist-powered Web site that lets any average Joe with an Internet connection peruse Kepler light curves—measurements of a star's brightness over time—and look for the dimming signifying the possible presence of a planet. The site, which launched December 16, was created by some of the same people who produced the highly successful online galaxy-sorting project Galaxy Zoo.

    The Planet Hunters interface is quite slick; the system asks users a set of simple questions about the data before them (although interpreting the data to answer those questions can be intimidating at first), and users can zoom in on promising areas of a star's light curve to try to discriminate between a transit and mere noise. But in a test drive, this reporter had a hard time locating anything that might plausibly represent a planet. Nevertheless I felt pressure to do the job well—what if some intelligent race of beings inhabiting some faraway world eludes discovery, simply because I was too lazy or too myopic to properly evaluate my serving of data? I was probably just being paranoid, but there is another, more realistic motivation for becoming an ace reader of light curves. If the Planet Hunters project turns up a new world that others missed in Kepler's data, the citizen scientist who flags its presence will be listed as a co-author on the scientific paper announcing the discovery.
    http://www.scientificamerican.com/bl...lan-2010-12-16
    http://www.planethunters.org/

    Lets give it a try!

    “Nothing could be more dangerous to the existence of this Republic than to introduce religion into politics”

  2. #2

    Default Re: Want to help find planets?

    This is awesome

  3. #3
    ♔Goodguy1066♔'s Avatar Praeses
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    Default Re: Want to help find planets?

    Well, .
    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
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    Both male and female walruses have tusks and have been observed using these overgrown teeth to help pull themselves out of the water.

    The mustached and long-tusked walrus is most often found near the Arctic Circle, lying on the ice with hundreds of companions. These marine mammals are extremely sociable, prone to loudly bellowing and snorting at one another, but are aggressive during mating season. With wrinkled brown and pink hides, walruses are distinguished by their long white tusks, grizzly whiskers, flat flipper, and bodies full of blubber.
    Walruses use their iconic long tusks for a variety of reasons, each of which makes their lives in the Arctic a bit easier. They use them to haul their enormous bodies out of frigid waters, thus their "tooth-walking" label, and to break breathing holes into ice from below. Their tusks, which are found on both males and females, can extend to about three feet (one meter), and are, in fact, large canine teeth, which grow throughout their lives. Male walruses, or bulls, also employ their tusks aggressively to maintain territory and, during mating season, to protect their harems of females, or cows.
    The walrus' other characteristic features are equally useful. As their favorite meals, particularly shellfish, are found near the dark ocean floor, walruses use their extremely sensitive whiskers, called mustacial vibrissae, as detection devices. Their blubbery bodies allow them to live comfortably in the Arctic region—walruses are capable of slowing their heartbeats in order to withstand the polar temperatures of the surrounding waters.
    The two subspecies of walrus are divided geographically. Atlantic walruses inhabit coastal areas from northeastern Canada to Greenland, while Pacific walruses inhabit the northern seas off Russia and Alaska, migrating seasonally from their southern range in the Bering Sea—where they are found on the pack ice in winter—to the Chukchi Sea. Female Pacific walruses give birth to calves during the spring migration north.
    Only Native Americans are currently allowed to hunt walruses, as the species' survival was threatened by past overhunting. Their tusks, oil, skin, and meat were so sought after in the 18th and 19th centuries that the walrus was hunted to extinction in the Gulf of St. Lawrence and around Sable Island, off the coast of Nova Scotia.

  4. #4
    B5C's Avatar Campidoctor
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    Default Re: Want to help find planets?

    Quote Originally Posted by ♔Goodguy1066♔ View Post
    Well, .
    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    You better damn evolve!

    “Nothing could be more dangerous to the existence of this Republic than to introduce religion into politics”

  5. #5
    B5C's Avatar Campidoctor
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    Default Re: Want to help find planets?

    You should look at the talk page. Interesting stars.

    “Nothing could be more dangerous to the existence of this Republic than to introduce religion into politics”

  6. #6

    Default Re: Want to help find planets?

    Only found one star with transit features, it was a giant with 10.6x the sun's circumference.

  7. #7
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    Default Re: Want to help find planets?

    Very fun

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