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The VASCO project: 100 red transients and their follow up

Authors :
Villarroel, Beatriz
Pelckmans, Kristiaan
Solano, Enrique
Laaksoharju, Mikael
Souza, Abel
Dom, Onyeuwaoma Nnaemeka
Laggoune, Khaoula
Mimouni, Jamal
Mattsson, Lars
Soodla, Johan
Castillo, Diego
Shultz, Matthew E.
Aworka, Rubby
Comerón, Sébastien
Geier, Stefan
Marcy, Geoffrey
Gupta, Alok C.
Bergstedt, Josefine
Bär, Rudolf E.
Buelens, Bart
Prieto, M. Almudena
Ramos-Almeida, Cristina
Wamalwa, Dismas Simiyu
Ward, Martin J.
Villarroel, Beatriz
Pelckmans, Kristiaan
Solano, Enrique
Laaksoharju, Mikael
Souza, Abel
Dom, Onyeuwaoma Nnaemeka
Laggoune, Khaoula
Mimouni, Jamal
Mattsson, Lars
Soodla, Johan
Castillo, Diego
Shultz, Matthew E.
Aworka, Rubby
Comerón, Sébastien
Geier, Stefan
Marcy, Geoffrey
Gupta, Alok C.
Bergstedt, Josefine
Bär, Rudolf E.
Buelens, Bart
Prieto, M. Almudena
Ramos-Almeida, Cristina
Wamalwa, Dismas Simiyu
Ward, Martin J.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The Vanishing & Appearing Sources during a Century of Observations (VASCO) project investigates astronomical surveys spanning a 70 years time interval, searching for unusual and exotic transients. We present herein the VASCO Citizen Science Project, that uses three different approaches to the identification of unusual transients in a given set of candidates: hypothesis-driven, exploratory-driven and machine learning-driven (which is of particular benefit for SETI searches). To address the big data challenge, VASCO combines methods from the Virtual Observatory, a user-aided machine learning and visual inspection through citizen science. In this article, we demonstrate the citizen science project, the new and improved candidate selection process and give a progress report. We also present the VASCO citizen science network led by amateur astronomy associations mainly located in Algeria, Cameroon and Nigeria. At the moment of writing, the citizen science project has carefully examined 12,000 candidate image pairs in the data, and has so far identified 713 objects classified as “vanished”. The most interesting candidates will be followed up with optical and infrared imaging, together with the observations by the most potent radio telescopes.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1248709149
Document Type :
Electronic Resource