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Merger of multiple armies of galaxies observed by Hubble
Science

Merger of multiple armies of galaxies observed by Hubble

The Hubble team has released an incredibly beautiful image of something incredibly strange that is known as the LEDA 17532.

In the image taken by Hubble, LEDA 17532, part of the Orion star cluster, is seen merging with another galaxy 520 million light-years away. In terms of distance from Earth, LEDA 17532 is located 520 million light-years away.

It is also known as 2MASX J05373599+0120038 and can be found in the constellation of Orion, where it can be found as CGCG 396-2.

Hundreds of thousands of volunteers classified galaxies in the Galaxy Zoo citizen science project for the purpose of helping scientists solve the problem of astronomical proportions how to sort through the vast amounts of data generated by robotic telescopes. This observation is a gem of the Galaxy Zoo project, a citizen science project. According to the astronomers, a problem of astronomical proportions is being faced by astronomers.

The Galaxy Zoo, a collection of astronomically curious objects collected by the public, has been selected for follow-up observations with Hubble as a result of a public vote.

One of these objects is LEDA 17532, and it was captured in the image above by the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) instrument onboard the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope as part of the Advanced Camera for Surveys mission.

The Galaxy Zoo project was born out of a quest to classify more than 900,000 galaxies by eye that was given to an astronomer, which was a mind-numbing task, the researchers said.

We were able to crowdsource the analysis of the Galaxy Zoo dataset by creating a web interface and inviting citizen scientists to contribute to the challenge, and within six months, more than 100,000 citizen astronomers had contributed more than 40 million galaxy classifications to our database through the Galaxy Zoo application.

The project and its successors have contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed scientific articles and led to a variety of intriguing astronomical discoveries beyond their original goals.

The success of the project has also inspired more than 100 citizen science projects on the Zooniverse portal, which range from analyzing the data from the Rosetta spacecraft's visit to comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko to counting killer whales around remote Alaskan islands.

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