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6 of the freakiest objects at galaxyzoo.org



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 9th 08, 06:04 AM posted to sci.astro, sci.astro.amateur
Jason H.[_2_]
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Posts: 19
Default 6 of the freakiest objects at galaxyzoo.org

All of these objects except for one were found by other people and
were posted under the Weird and Wonderful forum under the oddballs
thread over in galaxyzoo.org (which uses the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
at http://www.sdss.org as a data source.)

http://setisociety.org/object2.jpg

(I found this next one myself during classification)

http://setisociety.org/object1.jpeg

http://setisociety.org/object3.jpg

http://setisociety.org/object4.jpg

http://setisociety.org/object5.jpg

http://setisociety.org/object6.jpg

BTW, if one uses galaxyzoo.org or the SDSS site, one can see the exact
RA and DEC of each object you classify (and those of others who post
in the forums), in case somebody here wants to follow up on one of the
larger, closer freaks.

Regards, Jason H.
  #2  
Old January 9th 08, 05:45 PM posted to sci.astro, sci.astro.amateur
[email protected]
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Posts: 141
Default 6 of the freakiest objects at galaxyzoo.org

On Jan 9, 1:04*am, "Jason H." wrote:
http://setisociety.org/object6.jpg



Object6 is the strangest galaxy I've ever seen! Looks just like a
snake!
  #3  
Old January 10th 08, 06:11 AM posted to sci.astro,sci.astro.amateur
Humor
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Posts: 5
Default 6 of the freakiest objects at galaxyzoo.org



"Jason H." wrote:

All of these objects except for one were found by other people and
were posted under the Weird and Wonderful forum under the oddballs
thread over in galaxyzoo.org (which uses the Sloan Digital Sky Survey
at http://www.sdss.org as a data source.)

http://setisociety.org/object2.jpg

(I found this next one myself during classification)

http://setisociety.org/object1.jpeg

http://setisociety.org/object3.jpg

http://setisociety.org/object4.jpg

http://setisociety.org/object5.jpg

http://setisociety.org/object6.jpg

BTW, if one uses galaxyzoo.org or the SDSS site, one can see the exact
RA and DEC of each object you classify (and those of others who post
in the forums), in case somebody here wants to follow up on one of the
larger, closer freaks.

Regards, Jason H.


But the basic atomic patterns in Nature still look in tact?



 




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