Sun Club
SPACE DETECTIVE

Space agency wants YOU to study comet images and reveal solar system secrets – can you spot the difference?

THE European Space Agency has asked the public to assess photos of a comet in a 'cosmic game of spot the difference'.

On Thursday, the ESA revealed Rosetta Zoo, a citizen science project launched with Zooniverse (a web portal owned and operated by the Citizen Science Alliance).

Advertisement
THE European Space Agency is asking the public to assess photos of comets in a 'cosmic game of spot the difference'.
A 2014 and a 2016 model of the comet's surface, side by side.Credit: Rosetta/The European Space Agency

Rosetta Zoo invites volunteers to engage in an online game of 'spot the difference'.

And the subject in focus is a comet hundreds of millions of miles from Earth.

Between 2014 and 2016, the ESA's Rosetta spacecraft orbited and studied the rock dubbed Comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko.

Now, the space agency is hoping that citizen scientists and volunteers can help them uncover secrets about the rocky object and, more broadly, the solar system.

Advertisement

"By browsing through pictures collected by ESA's  mission, you can help scientists figure out how a comet's surface evolves as it swings around the Sun," the ESA said in a .

Comets are "cosmic snowballs of frozen gases, rock and dust", according to .

They're made of leftovers from the formation of the solar system.

When a comet approaches the Sun, it forms a "tail" made of gas and dust particles that face away from the large star.

Advertisement

Most read in Tech

SPOT OF BOTHER
Spotify reveals big change to subscriptions & fans fear price HIKE is coming
QUICK FLIX!
Clever Netflix button saves storage and makes using TV app so much faster
APPLE BITE
Fears iPhone feature could END as Government 'demands back door data access'
FUTURE WORLD
AI reveals how Gen Z and Millennials think their future retirement will look

This particular rocky object was first detected in 1969 and has an elliptical, 6.5-year orbit around the Sun. 

When the Rosetta spacecraft approached the comet in 2014, it became the first-ever to do so.

Shortly after, the spacecraft had a view of the comet as it moved through its orbit.

And with the help of the Sun, Rosetta got to capture different sides of the comet that are often hidden via its OSIRIS camera.

Advertisement
Topics
Advertisement
machibet777.com