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I second the request for having the dark theme on the talk pages, too. In Aurora zoo, and I imagine other image classification projects, the dark theme is a huge help during classification. However, on the talk pages those subjects suddenly become a lot less clear to the point where I wondered whether the talk pages always showed the subjects in lower resolution, which they don't. Since you can't choose which subjects you want to classify, anyone browsing the talk pages has to make do with the "less clear" version.
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(https://photos.app.goo.gl/m9gwubxpX7UbXyjr8)Here a slideshow of some artists notes I created using color pencils and a lightbox for Mediums along with the photography by myself, Darcie L. Tredwell, MA
https://photos.app.goo.gl/rLEBFCvtT5ta126E9
In reference to studying phenomenology and plants in Nature.
I wrote, illustrated and published a
bilingual short story and poetry book (creative and expressive arts) inspired by some of my experience here:
Wildflower Phonology & Cover Trail Poetry : English with transportations: Bilingual https://a.co/d/gjUR8f4
And here in a hardcover there are more stories, images and poetry influenced by citizen scientist studies: Cherries, Roses and Other Loves: Third Edition https://a.co/d/bsHjva9
And recently, I mentioned zooniverse.org on my Authors Guild website and other publication such as A Brook Book: A Water Study by Darcie L. Tredwell:
www darciewrotethese.com
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Hi @BrendanLJ. Thanks for your contribution to the projects here. The researchers and other people who run each project are listed on that project's About/Team page. Many projects have a statement of some kind that explains how volunteering on the project by classifying contributes to valuable research. (Here's one example.) In each of the projects you worked on, look at the text on the project's home page, and on Research and FAQ tabs on the project's About page. You should be able to find information there to help write a justification that working on the projects is serving the community.
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Looks like my comment disappeared when I tried to fix a mistake, so here I go again...
Great activity for kids of all ages - The constellations of the rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle" align the Christmas Eve. Leo, Lyra, Taurus, the moon and the Dippers align to reveal the location of the little dog. Need to get the word out - doesn't happen every year. Details at https://dcwalley.com
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That's an interesting idea! Using drones that can self-assemble and detect each other's position to create a Dyson sphere around the sun could be a feasible approach. It would allow for easy replacement of damaged drones without disrupting the overall structure. Implementing a similar positioning program as light show drones could help ensure proper alignment and coordination. This concept definitely has potential, and it would be intriguing to explore further Ball Sports Pro.
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Good question! Yes, for Supernova Hunters, see https://www.zooniverse.org/projects/dwright04/supernova-hunters/about/results (which lists the discoveries in that page, and then links to the Transient Name Server (for example, https://www.wis-tns.org/object/2020acnh).
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Kind regards. Dark matter, by its gravitational effect, can be understood as a cluster of gravitational strings that trap not only photons; but some kind of dense exotic particle that keeps the Universe stable.
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The image in Subject 104493060 depicts two galaxies merging and throwing out their contents across vast distances - on the order of several kiloparsecs in length - in this stunning, swirling merger of active galactic nuclei!