1 00:00:00,010 --> 00:00:03,010 [Music] 2 00:00:03,030 --> 00:00:07,050 I'm Marc Kuchner, a researcher at NASA's Goddard Space 3 00:00:07,070 --> 00:00:11,150 Flight Center, and I work on understanding distant planetary systems. 4 00:00:11,170 --> 00:00:15,180 A major quest of astronomers during the past 30 years 5 00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:19,210 has been to discover exoplanets and learn how they form. One strategy 6 00:00:19,230 --> 00:00:23,250 is to search for lots of young stars still surrounded by protoplanetary disks 7 00:00:23,270 --> 00:00:27,310 and debris disks. These clouds of gas, rock, 8 00:00:27,330 --> 00:00:31,440 ice, and dust, are the same types of environments that gave rise to our 9 00:00:31,460 --> 00:00:35,530 own solar system. From 2010 to 2011, 10 00:00:35,550 --> 00:00:39,640 NASA's WISE mission scanned the entire infrared sky 11 00:00:39,660 --> 00:00:43,680 and captured beautiful imagery. I'm most excited about this imagery 12 00:00:43,700 --> 00:00:47,730 because of all the new disks we can find in it. The WISE 13 00:00:47,750 --> 00:00:51,760 mission imaged about half a billion objects all over the sky. Only a 14 00:00:51,780 --> 00:00:55,850 few of these sources might actually be stars with disks, but we can't find them 15 00:00:55,870 --> 00:00:59,950 with computer software because the clues are too subtle. The human eye can 16 00:00:59,970 --> 00:01:03,970 sort things out, but it would take years for astronomers to visually evaluate 17 00:01:03,990 --> 00:01:08,050 all the possible sources. That's why NASA and Zooniverse 18 00:01:08,070 --> 00:01:12,080 are launching Disk Detective, a new citizen science project. 19 00:01:12,100 --> 00:01:16,140 At DiskDetective.org, you'll see animated flipbooks of 20 00:01:16,160 --> 00:01:20,240 images from the WISE All-Sky survey and other projects. 21 00:01:20,260 --> 00:01:24,260 Some images show protoplanetary and debris disks--the homes of 22 00:01:24,280 --> 00:01:28,290 extrasolar planets. Others contain galaxies, asteroids, 23 00:01:28,310 --> 00:01:32,370 nebulae and other objects. When you go to the site and 24 00:01:32,390 --> 00:01:36,390 classify objects, you'll be helping me and other NASA scientists 25 00:01:36,410 --> 00:01:40,480 figure out which is which. DiskDetective.org 26 00:01:40,500 --> 00:01:44,490 is a NASA-led crowdsourcing project whose main goal is to 27 00:01:44,510 --> 00:01:48,530 produce publishable scientific results. The disks we find together 28 00:01:48,550 --> 00:01:52,570 will be future targets for telescopes like Hubble and the James Webb Space 29 00:01:52,590 --> 00:01:56,650 Telescope, which will search for patterns in the disks, and for 30 00:01:56,670 --> 00:02:00,740 extrasolar planets they may contain. We hope you'll join us. 31 00:02:00,760 --> 00:02:04,780 [Music] 32 00:02:04,800 --> 00:02:08,840 [Music] 33 00:02:08,860 --> 00:02:13,020 [Beeping] 34 00:02:13,040 --> 00:02:22,689 [Beeping]